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Product category: Electron microscopy systems
News Release from: Jeol USA | Subject: Dart mass spectral technique
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial Team on 26 April 2007

Pet food testing method is a
'breakthrough'

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A professor and graduate student in University of the Pacific's chemistry department have developed a new method for determining how to identify foreign substances in pet food

The breakthrough discovery allows scientists to determine whether pet food has been contaminated in a matter of minutes Professor David Sparkman and graduate student Teresa Vail used a mass spectrometer with the Dart (direct analysis in real time) interface device to determine that a can of dog food that was recently recalled contained melamine, a chemical used in plastic furniture, cookware, and fertilisers

The chemical is at the heart of the nationwide recall of contaminated pet food that has caused numerous animal deaths.

"The significance of the Dart mass spectral technique is that results are available in minutes or seconds," Sparkman said.

"Because of enhancements we have made to the Dart technology, our answers are definitely unambiguous".

Mass spectrometry is used to determine the mass of and to identify molecules in substances.

By using mass spectrometry, Sparkman said, they were able to determine that a sample of Alpo dog food that had been listed in the recent recall contained melamine.

The sample produced an accurate mass signal that is specific to the chemical.

The Dart device, when connected to the mass spectrometer machine, allows food substances to be analyzed without the need for any sample preparation, he said.

The process takes only a few minutes.

The traditional process of determining whether a food substance has been contaminated using conventional gas chromatography/mass spectrometry or liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry techniques can take an hour or more.

The new method could save federal regulators time and money when testing food imports, Sparkman said.

The idea to use the method came after Vail received word that some of the cans of Alpo she recently purchased for her own dogs were recalled due to the possibility that they contained melamine.

Under Sparkman's direction, she tested the dog food and found that only one of a dozen cans tested positive for the chemical.

Vail said they were using the same testing method in other research projects in the department.

They will present their breakthrough method at an American Society of Mass Spectrometry conference in Indianapolis, in June.

Sparkman is a mass spectrometry consultant to the US Department of Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology (Nist) and manager of the chemistry department's mass spectrometry facility.

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