LC-MS study of the heat degradation of veterinary antibiotics in raw milk after boiling

[Display omitted] •Eleven antibiotics were tested in raw milk for heat degradation by LC-MS/MS.•Degradation rate constants, half-lives and degradation percentages were calculated.•Heat stability can’t be directly predicted from the chemical class of antibiotics.•Household practices give little prote...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2018-11, Vol.267, p.178-186
Hauptverfasser: László, Noémi, Lányi, Katalin, Laczay, Péter
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Eleven antibiotics were tested in raw milk for heat degradation by LC-MS/MS.•Degradation rate constants, half-lives and degradation percentages were calculated.•Heat stability can’t be directly predicted from the chemical class of antibiotics.•Household practices give little protection from the risks residues can pose. The aim of our study was to examine the degradation of veterinary antibiotics in milk during boiling. Raw cow milk samples were fortified with the target compounds and boiled for various short time-intervals prevailing in household practice. Antibiotic concentrations were determined by LC-MS/MS measurements. Degradation rate constants, half-lives and degradation percentages were calculated. Cefoperazone and cloxacillin proved to be the less and the most heat-stable substance, with 78.3% and 9.6% degradation in 300 s respectively. Aminoglicosides exhibited intermediate (33.8–43.6%), tetracycline (30.4%) and trimethoprim (22.6%) intermediate to high heat stability. The results demonstrate that antibiotic residues possibly present in raw milk exhibit high heat stability when treated for few seconds at around 100 °C. Keeping the milk at this temperature for at least two minutes would allow varying decrease in the amount of some compounds, but does not totally eliminate the potential risks to the consumer’s health.
ISSN:0308-8146
1873-7072
DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.11.041