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Dive into the research topics where Giulia Manetto is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulia Manetto.


Forensic Science International | 1997

Optimization of a simple method for the chiral separation of phenethylamines of forensic interest based on cyclodextrin complexation capillary electrophoresis and its preliminary application to the analysis of human urine and hair

Daniele Scarcella; Franco Tagliaro; Stefania Turrina; Giulia Manetto; Yuji Nakahara; Frederick P. Smith; Mario Marigo

Because of the forensic importance of the chiral analysis of amphetamine and other phenethylamines for investigating their synthetic pathways and the metabolic patterns of these compounds, a capillary electrophoresis method has been developed based on the chiral selectivity of beta-cyclodextrin. The influence of different experimental conditions, such as cyclodextrin nature and concentration, voltage, temperature and buffer concentration and pH, on analytical performance has been studied. The optimized analytical conditions are: capillary: bare fused silica, 50 microns I.D., 40 cm effective length; buffer: 150 mM phosphate pH = 2.5, 15 mM beta-cyclodextrin; voltage: 10 kV; temperature: 17.5 degrees C; detection: UV absorption at 200 nm wavelength. Under these conditions, amphetamine, methamphetamine and ephedrine have been easily separated, with baseline resolution of the respective enantiomers. Sensitivity was better than 300 ng per ml. The average precision of migration times of the three analytes was good with RSD = 0.45% and 0.58% in intra-day and day-to-day tests, respectively. Reproducibility of peak heights was also good, with RSD = 2.51% and 3.14% in intra-day and day-to-day tests, respectively. The preliminary analysis of amphetamine in human urine and hair samples, subjected to a simple work-up procedure based on liquid-liquid extraction, showed clean blank electropherograms, excellent chiral resolution and sensitivity, suitable for the analysis of real samples from amphetamine users.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 2000

Improved method for carbohydrate-deficient transferrin determination in human serum by capillary zone electrophoresis

Federica Crivellente; Giulio Fracasso; Roberta Valentini; Giulia Manetto; Anna Pia Riviera; Franco Tagliaro

Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) is a reliable marker of chronic or repeated alcohol abuse. It indicates a group of isoforms of human transferrin (Tf), the main iron transport serum protein, deficient in sialic acid residues (asialo-, monosialo- and disialo-Tf) in comparison to the main isotransferrin which contains four sialic acid groups (tetrasialo-Tf). The aim of the present work was to develop a capillary electrophoretic method suitable for rapid determination of CDT components in serum. Serum samples (0.1 ml) were saturated with iron by incubation with 10 mM FeCl3 (2 microl) and 500 mM NaHCO3 (3 microl) for 30 min, then diluted 1:10 in water and injected by positive pressure (0.5 p.s.i. for 10 s). Separation was performed with a capillary zone electrophoretic method using bare fused-silica capillaries (57 cm x 20 microm I.D.) and a buffer composed of 100 mM sodium tetraborate adjusted with 6 M HCl to pH 8.3 added with 1.5 mM diaminobutane. Applied voltage was 20 kV and temperature 25 degrees C. Detection was by UV absorption at 200 nm wavelength. Under the described conditions, asialo-, monosialo-, disialo-, trisialo- and tetrasialo-transferrin were baseline separated. The limit of detection (signal-to-noise ratio of 2) was about 0.3% for disialo-Tf, and 0.5% of trisialo-Tf, expressed as percentages of the terasialo-Tf peak area. Day-to-day RSDs of relative migration times were < or = 0.2%. Quantitation showed day-to-day RDSs < or = 6.9% and < or = 10.9% for disialo- and trisialo-Tf, respectively. The results from 79 control subjects, including social drinkers, and 23 alcoholics showed disialo- and trisialo-Tf significantly increased in patients (P<0.0001 and <0.01, respectively). A clear interference from trisialo-Tf in an immunoassay for CDT was demonstrated. The present method is suitable for confirmation of CDT immunoassays by independent technique.


Forensic Science International | 2000

Hair analysis by using radioimmunoassay, high-performance liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis to investigate chronic exposure to heroin, cocaine and/or ecstasy in applicants for driving licences

Franco Tagliaro; Roberta Valentini; Giulia Manetto; Federica Crivellente; G. Carli; Mario Marigo

The present paper describes an integrated diagnostic strategy to check the physical fitness of subjects, formerly users of illicit drugs, to obtain a driving license, after having quit their addiction. According to the Italian law, applicants for a driving license with a history of drug abuse must give evidence to have quit this behaviour and to show no risk of relapse in the future. To prove this, at our institute, they undergo medical examination, hair analysis and a urinalysis program on eight seriate samples, collected over about 40 days. About 700 subjects per year are investigated with this strategy. The hair samples are screened for opiates (morphine), cocaine and ecstasy, the most abused illicit substances in our region, by using commercial radioimmunoassays adopting cut-off levels of 0.1 ng/mg. All positive samples and about 10% of negatives are confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography. Further confirmation of results can be carried out by capillary electrophoresis (and/or GC/MS or MS/MS). In 1998, the prevalence of positives for morphine, cocaine and ecstasy was 4.8, 11.3 and 2.6%, respectively. In this year, for the first time, the percentage of hair samples positive for cocaine was greater than that for opiates. The results of this integrated diagnostic strategy are presented and discussed, with particular emphasis on the comparison between hair analysis on a single sample and seriate urinalyses (on eight samples).


Electrophoresis | 2000

Field-amplified sample stacking capillary zone electrophoresis applied to the analysis of opiate drugs in hair

Giulia Manetto; Franco Tagliaro; Federica Crivellente; Vincenzo Lorenzo Pascali; Mario Marigo

The present paper describes the methodological optimization and validation of capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) for the determination of major opiates (morphine, codeine, 6‐monoacetylmorphine, acetylcodeine, heroin) in hair samples by using a field‐amplified sample stacking injection before the separation in a binary running buffer (0.1 M sodium phosphate, pH 2.5, with 40% ethylene glycol). The applied potential was 20 kV, at 25°C. Detection was by UV absorption at the fixed wavelength of 214 nm or by recording the full spectrum between 190—400 nm, thus improving the analytical selectivity and identification power of CZE. Hair samples were liquid/liquid extracted; dried extracts, reconstituted with a low‐conductivity solvent (0.1 mM phosphoric acid, with 80% 1‐propanol), were injected by electromigration at 10 kV for 99 s, after a 0.5 mm plug of water. Under the described conditions, the limit of detection (with a signal‐to‐noise ratio of 3) in hair extracts was 100 pg/mL for codeine, 75 pg/mL for morphine and 6‐monoacetylmorphine (6‐MAM), 150 pg/mL for ethylmorphine, and 0.75 ng/mL for acetylcodeine and heroin. The precision of the method was validated for standards in pure solution by using internal standardization, providing for intraday and day‐to‐day assays, in terms of migration times, relative standard deviation (RSD) values ≤0.2%, and in terms of peak areas, RSD values <5.71%.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2002

Capillary zone electrophoresis and artificial neural networks for estimation of the post-mortem interval (PMI) using electrolytes measurements in human vitreous humour

G. Bocaz-Beneventi; Franco Tagliaro; Federica Bortolotti; Giulia Manetto; J. Havel

Abstract Determination of electrolyte concentrations (mainly potassium) in vitreous humour has long been considered an important tool in human death investigations for the estimation of the post-mortem interval (PMI). On the basis of its well known potential in ion analysis, capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) has recently been applied to achieve a rapid and simultaneous determination of inorganic ions in this extracellular fluid. In the present work, artificial neural networks (ANN) were applied for modelling of the relationship of multicomponent CZE analysis of K+, NH4+, Na+, and Ba2+ ions in vitreous humour with PMI. In a study based on 61 cases with different causes of death and a known PMI ranging from 3 to 144 h, the use of ANNs considering all inorganic ion data from the human vitreous humour, achieved a substantial improvement of post-mortem interval prediction. Good linear correlation was observed (r2 = 0.98) and in comparison to the traditional linear least squares (LLS) method applied only to K+ levels in the vitreous humour, the prediction of PMI with ANN was improved by a factor of 5 from ≈± 15 h to less than 3 h.


Forensic Science International | 1998

A brief introduction to capillary electrophoresis

Franco Tagliaro; Giulia Manetto; Federica Crivellente; Fp Smith

Abstract The present chapter aims to summarize the basic instrumental aspects and separation principles of capillary electrophoresis, with particular attention to those relevant in forensic sciences, and to make comprehensible also to newcomers the following papers of the present monographic volume. In brief, a capillary electropherograph consists of an injection system, a separation capillary (20–100 μm I.D., 20–100 cm length), a high voltage source (delivering up to 30 kV and up to 200–250 μA), electrodes and electrode jars and detector(s). All these instrumental components are described, with emphasis on the detection techniques. In addition, the main separation techniques are presented, including capillary zone electrophoresis, micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatography, capillary electrochromatography, capillary isotachophoresis, capillary gel electrophoresis, capillary isoelectric focusing and chiral separation methods.


Forensic Science International | 1998

Hair analysis for abused drugs by capillary zone electrophoresis with field-amplified sample stacking

Franco Tagliaro; Giulia Manetto; Federica Crivellente; Daniele Scarcella; Mario Marigo

The present paper describes the methodological optimisation and validation of a capillary zone electrophoresis method for the determination of morphine, cocaine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) in hair, with injection based on field-amplified sample stacking. Diode array UV absorption detection was used to improve analytical selectivity and identification power. Analytical conditions: running buffer 100 mM potassium phosphate adjusted to pH 2.5 with phosphoric acid, applied potential 10 kV, temperature 20 degrees C, injection by electromigration at 10 kV for 10 s, detection by UV absorption at the fixed wavelength of 200 nm or by recording the full spectrum between 190 and 400 nm. Injection conditions: the dried hair extracts were reconstituted with a low-conductivity solvent (0.1 mM formic acid), the injection end of the capillary was dipped in water for 5 s without applying pressure (external rinse step), then a plug of 0.1 mM phosphoric acid was loaded by applying 0.5 psi for 10 s and, finally, the sample was injected electrokinetically at 10 kV for 10 s. Under the described conditions, the limit of detection was 2 ng/ml for MDMA, 8 ng/ml for cocaine and 6 ng/ml for morphine (with a signal-to-noise ratio of 5). The lowest concentration suitable for recording interpretable spectra was about 10-20-times the limit of detection of each analyte. The intraday and day-to-day reproducibility of migration times (n = 6), with internal standardisation, was characterised by R.S.D. values < or = 0.6%; peak area R.S.D.s were better than 10% in intraday and than 15% in day-to-day experiments. Analytical linearity was good with R2 better than 0.9990 for all the analytes.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2001

Use of β-cyclodextrin in the capillary zone electrophoretic separation of the components of clandestine heroin preparations

Marco Macchia; Giulia Manetto; Claudio Mori; Chiara Papi; Nicoló Di Pietro; Vittorio Salotti; Federica Bortolotti; Franco Tagliaro

The present paper describes the methodological optimization and validation of a capillary zone electrophoresis method for the rapid determination of heroin, secondary products and additives present in clandestine heroin samples, by using 20 mM beta-cyclodextrins in phosphate buffer, pH 3.23. Applied potential was 15 kV and separation temperature was 24 degrees C; detection was by UV absorption at 200 nm wavelength. Heroin samples were first dissolved in CHCl3-MeOH (96:4, v/v) and injected by pressure (0.5 p.s.i., 3 s; 1 p.s.i.=6894.76 Pa) after evaporation of the organic mixture and reconstitution in aqueous buffer. Under the described conditions, phenylethylamine (internal standard), morphine, monoacetylmorphine, heroin, acetylcodeine, papaverine, codeine and narcotine were baseline resolved in less than 10 min. The limit of detection was better than 1 microg/ml for each analyte. The study of the intra-day and day-to-day precision showed, in terms of migration times, RSDs < or = 0.71% and, in terms of peak areas, RSDs < or = 3.2%. Also, the evaluation of linearity and analytical accuracy of the method provided good results for all the analytes investigated, thus allowing its application to real cases of seized controlled drug preparations.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2001

Potassium concentration differences in the vitreous humour from the two eyes revisited by microanalysis with capillary electrophoresis

Franco Tagliaro; Federica Bortolotti; Giulia Manetto; Francesca Cittadini; Vincenzo Lorenzo Pascali; Mario Marigo

This paper presents a study of the variability of potassium concentrations in the vitreous humour of the two eyes of the same body at identical postmortem interval. The study was carried out by collecting microsample amounts (50 microl) of vitreous humour and by using an original method of capillary electrophoresis with indirect detection. The electrophoretic separations were carried out in a pH 4.5 running buffer composed of 5 mmol/l imidazole, 5 mmol/l 18-crown-6 ether and 6 mmol/l alpha-hydroxybutyric acid. Detection was by indirect UVabsorption at 214 nm. Vitreous humour samples were collected from 57 medico-legal autopsies or external examinations of cases of sudden natural or violent deaths. All samples prior to analysis were diluted 1:20 with a 40 microg/ml aqueous solution of barium, the used internal standard, and finally injected by nitrogen pressure. The mean concentrations of potassium measured in the two eyes of all the cases included in the present study ranged from 4.1 to 23.5 mmol/l with the postmortem interval values varying from 7 to 144 h. A highly significant (P<0.0001) linear correlation was found between these two parameters as described by the equation: y=0.1698x+2.3587, r=0.89. The intra-eye variability of potassium concentrations was low with an average RSD of 3.89% (+/- 1.83 SD) (48 eyes, five samples per eye). No statistically significant difference was found between the potassium concentrations in the two eyes of the same subject in a group of 24 cases, excepting a single case.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2001

Determination of apparent binding constants of drugs by capillary electrophoresis using β-cyclodextrin as ligand and three different linear plotting methods

Maria Silvana Bellini; Zdenek Deyl; Giulia Manetto; Michaela Kohlı́čková

Capillary electrophoretic estimation of apparent binding constants (Kapp) for naproxen, salbutamol, indomethacine and procaine with beta-cyclodextrin is presented. While with naproxen and indomethacine this approach was straightforward and gave well compatible results by three different linearization plots (double reciprocal, x reciprocal and y reciprocal), with salbutamol a higher value than reported for the electromigration estimation of this magnitude was obtained (a fourfold increase). This difference is ascribed to the fact that the measurements were done in the acid region (while the reported values were obtained at higher pH values). As a matter of fact the values of Kapp, reported in this communication for salbutamol comply better with the value of Kapp (69.3) obtained by the solubility method.

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Franco Tagliaro

The Catholic University of America

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Vincenzo Lorenzo Pascali

The Catholic University of America

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Francesca Cittadini

The Catholic University of America

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Franco Tagliaro

The Catholic University of America

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Daniela Marchetti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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