Abstract:
Modern farming practices involve administration of a wide range of veterinary drugs
and biological substances to food-producing animals with the primary aim to combat
diseases and promote growth. The residues of these drugs can enter into food chain
either directly or indirectly resulting in serious allergic reactions in humans, and
development of drug resistance in multiple strains of bacteria as in case of antibiotics.
The main focus of this research work was the development of analytical
methodologies for the identification of various classes of antibiotics in broiler chicken
and bovine milk using LC-MS/MS. All the developed methods were validated
according to European Commission Decision 657/2002/EC and parameters
determined are: specificity, accuracy, precision, repeatability, within lab
reproducibility, decision limits (CCα) and detection capability (CCβ). The first
method developed for the analysis of florfenicol residues in chicken muscles. It was
found that most of the florfenicol residues remained bound with tissues and could
only be extracted with organic solvents after digestion of the tissues with strong
hydrochloric acid at 95-100 °C. The bound residues of florfenicol were present in
higher concentration as compared to un-bound residues in various tissues of broiler
chicken. The second method was developed for the multi-amphenicol analysis in
which florfenicol, florfenicol amine, chloramphenicol and thiamphenicol were
simultaneously analyzed. The accuracy values were 86.4 to 108.1% and precision
values were 2.7 to 16.3%, respectively. Analysis of the various raw samples
confirmed the presence of florfenicol and chloramphenicol residues in few samples at
low levels. Third method involved multiclass multidrug residues, in which total 68
compounds from six antibiotic classes were analyzed. The accuracy values were 70-
102.9 % for nearly 87% compounds. The developed method can be used for screening
purpose to reduce the number of samples for confirmatory analysis, thus improving
the efficiency of the laboratory by reducing cost and time. Lastly, prevalence of
penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics was studied in bovine milk samples obtained
from two cities of Punjab, Pakistan using UPLC-MS. Only amoxicillin, ampicillin,
Pen G and cloxacillin were found and confirmed in 18 samples.