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Volume 8, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Vet Sci Technol, an open access journal

ISSN: 2157-7579

Veterinary 2017

September 04-05, 2017

September 04-05, 2017 | Paris, France

7

th

International Veterinary Congress

Two validated methods to measure methadone concentrations in dog plasma and umbilical cord by LC-

MS/MS

Andrea Barbarossa, Noemi Romagnoli

and

Anna Zaghini

University of Bologna, Italy

Statement of the Problem

: Methadone is an opioid μ-receptor agonist commonly used in human and veterinarymedicine via systemic

or epidural route to achieve intra- and post- operative pain relief. The advantages of the epidural administration of methadone are

a lower evidence of side effects, a more profound and prolonged analgesia, and a lower dose required. To date, no information is

available about the placental transfer of methadone in dogs and the respective maternal/fetal plasma concentration ratios. The aim of

the present study was to develop and validate two methods for the accurate and precise determination of methadone concentrations

in bitches plasma and in the umbilical cords of their puppies, after epidural or systemic administration during surgical caesarian

section.

Methodology & Theoretical Orientation

: Two different techniques were developed for the determination of methadone in the two

matrices, using in both methadone-D3 as internal standard. Plasma samples were extracted with acetonitrile and, after centrifugation,

the supernatant was evaporated to dryness and reconstituted with mobile phase. Umbilical cords were homogenized, added of formic

acid and, after centrifugation, the supernatant underwent a cleanup step on SPE cartridge. The eluted sampled was then evaporated

to dryness and reconstituted with mobile phase. All samples were analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass

spectrometry.

Findings

: The methods have been successfully validated in accordance with current European guidelines, providing satisfying

performances over the range 1-250 ng/mL for plasma and 1-250 ng/g for umbilical cord.

Conclusions & Significance

: This project raised from the need of determining methadone plasmatic concentration in bitches

undergoing surgical caesarian section and in the umbilical cords of their puppies, in order to assess if newborns are less exposed to

the drug following epidural administration. The proposed techniques proved to be suitable for the purpose and have been successfully

applied to real samples.

Biography

Andrea Barbarossa has his expertise in many aspects of veterinary pharmacology, including antimicrobial resistance, residues and pharmacokinetics/

pharmacodynamics studies. In particular, he has been involved in many projects on analgesic and anesthetic drugs in dogs and cats, including ketamine,

buprenorphine, medetomidine and methadone. He has years of expertise on analytical chemistry, especially with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

techniques, which are often the gold standard for this kind of studies.

andrea.barbarossa@unibo.it

Andrea Barbarossa et al., J Vet Sci Technol 2017, 8:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7579-C1-024