Page 192 - Advances in Forensic Applications of Mass Spectrometry - Jehuda Yinon
P. 192

1522_C04.fm  Page 175  Thursday, November 13, 2003  9:54 AM









                                2.  Wolfe,  R.R.,  Tracers in  Metabolic  Research  æ  Radioactive and  Stable  Iso-
                                   tope/Mass Spectrometry Methods, Alan R. Liss, New York, 1983.
                                3.  Baillie, T.A., The use of stable isotopes in pharmacological research, Pharma-
                                   col. Rev., 33, 81, 1981.
                                4.  Haskins,  N.J.,  The application of  stable isotope in biomedical  research,
                                   Biomed. Mass Spectrom., 9, 269, 1982.
                                5.  Ramesh, S. et al., Three-electron oxidations. 18. Carbon-13 and deuterium
                                   isotope effects in the cooxidation of 2-hydroxy-2-methylbutyric acid and 2-
                                   propanol. Evidence for a two-step mechanism, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 103, 5172,
                                   1981.
                                6.  Liu, R.H. et al., Isotopically labelled analogues for drug quantitation, Anal.
                                   Chem., 74, 618A, 2002.
                                7.  Liu, R.H., Sample differentiation by stable-isotope-ratio mass spectrometry,
                                   in Analytical Methods in Forensic Chemistry, Ho, M.H., Ed., Ellis Horwood,
                                   New York, 1990, Chap. 4.
                                8. Rouhi, A.M., Nitrogen isotope tales from a tomb, C&EN, November 12, 2001,
                                   p. 34.
                                9. Gonfiantini, R., Standards for stable isotope measurements in natural com-
                                   pounds, Nature, 271, 534, 1978.
                               10. Urey, H.C. et al., Measurement of paleotemperatures and temperatures of the
                                   upper cretaceous of England, Denmark, and the Southeastern United States,
                                   Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., 62, 399, 1951.
                               11. Meier-Augenstein, W., The chromatographic side of isotope ratio mass spec-
                                   trometry — Pitfalls and answers, LC/GC Int., 10(1), 17–25, 1997.
                               12. Craig, H., Standard for reporting concentrations of deuterium and oxygen-
                                   18 in natural waters, Science, 133, 1833, 1961.
                               13. Junk, G. and Svec, H., The absolute abundance of the nitrogen isotopes in
                                   the atmosphere and compressed gas from various sources, Geochim. Cosmo-
                                   chim. Acta, 14, 234, 1958.
                               14. Melander, L. and Saunders, W.H., Reaction Rates of Isotopic Molecules, Wiley
                                   & Sons, New York, 1980.
                               15. Rieley, G., Derivatization of organic-compounds prior to gas-chromato-
                                   graphic combustion-isotope ratio mass-spectrometric analysis æ identifica-
                                   tion of isotope fractionation processes, Analyst, 119, 915, 1994.
                               16. Meier-Augenstein, W., Applied gas chromatography coupled to isotope ratio
                                   mass spectrometry, J. Chromatogr. A, 842, 351, 1999.
                               17. Ehleringer, J.R. et al., Tracing the geographical origin of cocaine, Nature, 408,
                                   311, 2000.
                               18. Burlingame, A.L. et al., Mass spectrometry, Anal. Chem., 70, R647, 1998.
                               19. Preston, T. and Slater, C., Mass-spectrometric analysis of stable-isotope-
                                   labeled amino-acid tracers, Proc. Nutr. Soc., 53, 363, 1994.


                             © 2004 by CRC Press LLC
   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197