Proper determination of the amount of selenium (Se) in infant formula is important to maintain the health of non-breastfed babies. A simple dilute-and-shoot method using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry… Click to show full abstract
Proper determination of the amount of selenium (Se) in infant formula is important to maintain the health of non-breastfed babies. A simple dilute-and-shoot method using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to determine Se in liquid infant formula was developed and validated in single- and cross-laboratory validations. Samples were diluted in an aqueous solution containing a surfactant and acetic acid and then directly introduced to ICP-MS without microwave digestion. For ICP-MS detection modes, the no-gas mode was preferable to the helium mode. In the single-laboratory validation, the developed method indicated excellent linearity (R2 = 0.998), satisfactory limit of quantification (instrumental 0.03 ng/mL, method 0.075 μg/100 mL), and acceptable accuracy (relative standard deviation = 1.8–6.6%, recovery = 87–101%) in a recovery test at three spike levels. Furthermore, the result of a certified standard reference material (SRM 1849a) suggested good trueness (115%). In the cross-laboratory validation between two laboratories, the reproducibility of the dilute-and-shoot method was comparable with the authentic microwave digestion method based on the AOAC official method. The ratios of observed Se by the dilute-and-shoot method to that of the microwave digestion method ranged from 81 to 113%. These data suggest that the method presented here is a reliable method to determine Se content in liquid infant formula.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.