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From the Street to the Laboratory: Analytical Profiles of Methoxetamine, 3-Methoxyeticyclidine and 3-Methoxyphencyclidine and their Determination in Three Biological Matrices

Giorgia de Paoli, Simon D. Brandt, Jason Wallach, Roland Archer, Derrick J. Pounder

Journal of Analytical Toxicology April 3, 2013 DOI: 10.1093/jat/bkt023 via OpenAlex

Summary

Three psychoactive arylcyclohexylamines sold online as research chemicals were chemically identified: methoxetamine, N-ethyl-1-(3-methoxyphenyl)cyclohexanamine, and 1-[1-(3-methoxyphenyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine. A validated liquid chromatography method with ultraviolet detection reliably measured these compounds in blood, urine, and vitreous humor at concentrations from 0.16 to 5.0 mg/L, while mass spectrometry served as a confirmatory technique.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Method development and validation study Qualitative Peer reviewed
Keywords Chromatography Chemistry
Citations 30
Key finding Three arylcyclohexylamines were identified and a validated HPLC-UV method was developed for their quantitative analysis in biological fluids.

Abstract

Three psychoactive arylcyclohexylamines, advertised as "research chemicals," were obtained from an online retailer and characterized by gas chromatography ion trap electron and chemical ionization mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and diode array detection. The three phencyclidines were identified as 2-(ethylamino)-2-(3-methoxyphenyl)cyclohexanone (methoxetamine), N-ethyl-1-(3-methoxyphenyl)cyclohexanamine and 1-[1-(3-methoxyphenyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine. A qualitative/quantitative method of analysis was developed and validated using liquid chromatography (HPLC) electrospray tandem mass spectrometry and ultraviolet (UV) detection for the determination of these compounds in blood, urine and vitreous humor. HPLC-UV proved to be a robust, accurate and precise method for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of these substances in biological fluids (0.16-5.0 mg/L), whereas the mass spectrometer was useful as a confirmatory tool.

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