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Enantiomeric profiling of amphetamine and methamphetamine in wastewater: A 7-year study in regional and urban Queensland, Australia.

The Science of the total environment(2018)

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摘要
Enantiomeric profiling was used in this study to investigate the consumption of amphetamine and methamphetamine in regional and urban Southeast Queensland, Australia over a period of seven years. S(+) methamphetamine was predominantly consumed in both urban and regional areas, showing a two and three fold increase in urban and regional catchments respectively between 2011 and 2017. The ratio of amphetamine to methamphetamine (AMP/METH) in wastewater reflected the expected excretion profile of methamphetamine consumption indicating the presence of amphetamine in this study was primarily the result of methamphetamine metabolism. However, the occasional occurrence of R(-) amphetamine in samples containing higher AMP/METH ratios, suggested the consumption of racemic amphetamine. The R(-) methamphetamine enantiomer was also identified in several samples, possibly indicative that the phenyl-2-propanone (P2P) synthesis process rather than the more typical reduction of ephedrines was also being used to manufacture methamphetamine. Furthermore, we identified two samples with a significantly different enantiomer ratio for the METH and AMP as well as a much lower AMP/METH concentration ratio suggesting contribution from direct disposal of methamphetamine into the sewer. This study demonstrated that enantiomeric profiling in wastewater-based epidemiology can provide valuable information for evaluating the origin of amphetamine in wastewater as either a metabolite of methamphetamine consumption or amphetamine itself.
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