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Publications in Scientific Journals:

G. Zachariadis, D. Kapsimali, E. Rosenberg:
"A review of recent developments in sample pretreatment, separation and hyphenated atomic and mass spectrometric techniques for organoselenium speciation in biological liquids";
Current Organic Chemistry (invited), 14 (2010), 2282 - 2299.



English abstract:
Since organoselenium species like selenoaminoacids, selenopeptides, alkylselenides etc. and also the inorganic species selenite
(Se (IV)) and selenate (Se (VI)) are known to be present in biological liquids and tissues, some of them playing an important role, there is
a constant demand to develop or improve current analytical methodologies in order to enable species-specific detection and determination
of these species in biological samples. The availability of various atomization techniques in atomic spectrometry and also of various ionization
techniques in mass and tandem mass spectrometry have significantly increased the analytical armoury for organoselenium speciation.
The literature in this field is abundant and fast growing, thus in this review only recent developments reported during the last decade
and referring to the application of modern hyphenated techniques based on atomic or mass spectrometric detection are reviewed. The
available information is classified according to the sample pretreatment procedures applied, the separation techniques and detectors used.

Keywords:
Organoselenium, Biological liquids, Gas chromatography, Liquid chromatography, Inductively coupled plasma, Mass spectrometry, Atomic spectrometry, Hyphenated techniques, Speciation


"Official" electronic version of the publication (accessed through its Digital Object Identifier - DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138527210793351445


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.