ABSTRACT
This work describes a novel methodology to analyze four tricyclic antidepressants (amitriptyline, doxepin, imipramine and, nortriptyline) in urine samples by combining supramolecular microextraction and paper spray ionization mass spectrometry (PS-MS). The proposed method uses a supramolecular solvent in which reverse micelles of 1-decanol are dispersed in tetrahydrofuran (THF)/water. The extraction of the tricyclic antidepressants at pH 9.0 requires a sample volume of 10.0 mL, short extraction time (1.0 min of extraction and 5 min of centrifugation), low amounts of organic solvent (50 µL of 1-decanol and 200 µL of THF), and provides high preconcentration factors: 96.9 to amitriptyline, 93.6 to doxepin, 71.3 to imipramine, and 146.9 to nortriptyline. The quantification by PS-MS is fast and straightforward because chromatographic separation is not required and all analytes were determined simultaneously. The limits of detection (LOD), quantification (LOQ), and the precision (RSD, %) of the developed method ranged between 5.2 and 8.6 µg L-1, 17.4-28.7 µg L-1 and 1.3-12.9%, respectively. Urine samples of five individuals (three males and two females) were used for accuracy evaluation. The accuracy obtained in these spiked urine samples at µg L-1 levels varied from 95.3 to 112.0%. The method also provided clean mass spectra with a high signal-to-noise ratio, which demonstrates the analytical appeal combination of supramolecular microextraction with determination by paper spray mass spectrometry.