Analysis of bitter orange dietary supplements for natural and synthetic phenethylamines by LC –MS/MS

In this study, an LC –MS/MS method was established to quantify five natural amines (synephrine, octopamine, tyramine,N‐methyltyramine, and hordenine) and four synthetic phenethylamines (phenylephrine, methylsynephrine, etilefrine, and isopropyloctopamine) in dietary supplements sold in the US. The method was validated and found to have acceptable performance to accurately measure analytes in complex botanical pro ducts. The average recoveries from a blank matrix were 88–125% with an RSD of 0.5–7.0%. Fifty‐nine products labeled to contain bitter orange peel, extract, or its amines were purchased and their amine content was measured. Several products were found to contain higher amounts of amines than th at expected from a typical bitter orange extract. Of the 23 products that made label claims for synephrine, only 5 products (22%) were within 80–120% of labeled synephrine content. The presence of synthetic amines, methylsynephrine (up to 240 mg/daily serving), and isopropyloctopamine (up to 76 mg /daily serving), whose effects in humans are not known, were detected in six products and one product, respectively. While the use of methylsynephrine and isopropyloctopamine are not permitted in dietary supplements, hordenine,N‐methyltyramine, and octopamine are currently listed on the FDA’s Dietary Supplement Ingredient Advisory List.
Source: Drug Testing and Analysis - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Authors: Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research