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Piergiorgio Zuccaro

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

4 papers in the library · 222 citations · publishing 2003-2008

Papers

Usefulness of Sweat Testing for the Detection of MDMA after a Single-Dose Administration*

Journal of Analytical Toxicology July 1, 2003 Simona Pichini, M.d. Sánchez Navarro, Roberta Pacifici et al. 66 citations

After a single 100-mg dose of MDMA, the drug appears in sweat within 1.5 hours and peaks at 24 hours, but the amount varies up to 30-fold between individuals, ranging from 3.2 to 1326.1 ng per patch. Only traces of the metabolite MDA are detected. An onsite sweat strip test is positive at 1.5 hours, though 18% false-negative results occur in the first 6 hours. Sweat patch and onsite strip testing offer noninvasive ways to monitor MDMA use.

Liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure ionization electrospray mass spectrometry determination of "hallucinogenic designer drugs" in urine of consumers.

Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis June 9, 2008 Simona Pichini, Mitona Pujadas, Emilia Marchei et al. 59 citations

A liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method was developed to measure ten designer drugs—including MDMA, several 2C-series phenethylamines, m-CPP, and tryptamines—in urine samples from 32 consumers. Solid-phase extraction at pH 6 was applied to both non-hydrolyzed and enzymatically hydrolyzed urine, with 3,4-methylendioxypropylamphetamine (MDPA) as an internal standard. Chromatographic separation used a C18 column with a gradient of ammonium bicarbonate and acetonitrile, and detection was performed in single ion monitoring mode with electrospray ionization. Limits of quantification ranged from 20 to 60 ng/mL, calibration curves were linear to 2000 ng/mL, and mean recoveries were 55.4–95.6%. Higher analyte concentrations in hydrolyzed samples indicated the presence of conjugated compounds.

Quantification of the plant-derived hallucinogen Salvinorin A in conventional and non-conventional biological fluids by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry after Salvia divinorum smoking.

Rapid communications in mass spectrometry : RCM January 1, 2005 Simona Pichini, Sergio Abanades, Magí Farré et al. 58 citations

A gas chromatography–mass spectrometry method was developed and validated to measure Salvinorin A, the main active compound in the hallucinogenic plant Salvia divinorum, in plasma, urine, saliva, and sweat. The method uses 17-alpha-methyltestosterone as an internal standard and extracts the compound with a chloroform/isopropanol mixture. It was validated over a concentration range of 0.015–5 microg/mL for plasma, urine, and saliva, and 0.01–5 microg/patch for sweat, with mean recoveries of 77.1–92.7% and precision and accuracy better than 15%. When applied to two consumers after smoking 75 mg of plant leaves, Salvinorin A was detected in urine (2.4 and 10.9 ng/mL) and saliva (11.1 and 25.0 ng/mL), but not in sweat patches.

Combined immunomodulating properties of 3,4‐methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and cannabis in humans

Addiction May 22, 2007 Roberta Pacifici, Piergiorgio Zuccaro, Magı́ Farré et al. 39 citations

People who use both MDMA (ecstasy) and cannabis show long-term changes in immune function, including lower levels of interleukin-2 and higher levels of anti-inflammatory transforming growth factor beta-1, along with fewer total lymphocytes, CD4 cells, and natural killer cells. These immune alterations persisted over one year. Regular users of both drugs had a higher rate of mild infections compared to occasional users and those who used only cannabis or neither drug. Cannabis-only users showed intermediate immune changes. The findings suggest that sustained disruption of immune balance may lead to poorer general health and greater susceptibility to infections.