
The presence of some drugs in meat samples can cause threat to human health, therefore, its analysis is highly desirable for food safety purposes. In this work, a solid-phase extraction procedure for the determination of oxprenolol, a non-selective beta-blocker, and such anabolic agents as methandienone and testosterone in beef meat samples has been developed. Extraction conditions were optimized to achieve high sensitivity and accuracy of the results. The procedure was validated using meat samples free from target analytes. As a result, high selectivity and sensitivity were observed with the detection limits between 0.25 and 1.25 ng/g, and the results were not affected by matrix components. The proposed procedure was applied to the analysis of real beef samples purchased in the market, and the results have revealed the presence of contaminated samples. The concentration of oxprenolol in the contaminated sample was 7 ng/g, methandienone content in the sample was 30 ng/g, while testosterone level was 4 ng/g.
H1-99, Meat contamination, Solid-phase extraction, Science (General), Quality control, Anabolic agents, Food safety, Social sciences (General), Beta-blockers, Q1-390, Research Article
H1-99, Meat contamination, Solid-phase extraction, Science (General), Quality control, Anabolic agents, Food safety, Social sciences (General), Beta-blockers, Q1-390, Research Article
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