The GC-MS detection and characterization of reticuline as a marker of opium use.
Author: Al Amri AM, Smith RM, El Haj BM, Juma'a MH.
Source:
Forensic science international, 140(2-3), 175-183.
Reticuline (a precursor of opium alkaloids) was detected and characterised as its
trimethylsilyl ethers, acetyl esters and methyl ethers by GC-EIMS and GC-CIMS in
opium and the urine of opium users after hydrolysis by acid or beta-glucuronidase
as coextractive of morphine. Because this compound cannot be detected in heroin
and poppy seeds, it is suggested as a differentiating marker between opium and
heroin use, opium and poppy seeds use, or opium and "pharmaceutical" codeine use
in cases when opiate use has been confirmed by detection of morphine and codeine
in the urine. As well as being a constituent of opium, reticuline in the urine of
opium users may also result from the metabolic demethylation of the three other
benzyltetrahydroisoquinoline opium alkaloids: codamine, laudanosine and
laudanine.