Traumatic
brain injury (TBI) is a serious public health concern
for which sensitive and objective diagnostic methods remain lacking.
While advances in neuroimaging have improved diagnostic capabilities,
the complementary use of molecular biomarkers can provide clinicians
with additional insight into the nature and severity of TBI. In this
study, a panel of eight metabolites involved in distinct pathophysiological
processes related to concussion was quantified using high-performance
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS). Specifically,
the newly developed method can simultaneously determine urinary concentrations
of glutamic acid, homovanillic acid, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, methionine
sulfoxide, lactic acid, pyruvic acid, N-acetylaspartic
acid, and F2α-isoprostane without intensive sample
preparation or preconcentration. The method was systematically validated
to assess sensitivity (method detection limits: 1–20 μg/L),
accuracy (81–124% spike recoveries in urine), and reproducibility
(relative standard deviation: 4–12%). The method was ultimately
applied to a small cohort of urine specimens obtained from healthy
college student volunteers. The method presented here provides a new
technique to facilitate future work aiming to assess the clinical
efficacy of these putative biomarkers for noninvasive assessment of
TBI.
The developed pH nanoprobe unveiled nanomaterial properties that previously unknown (e.g., devastating cytotoxicity) via real-time label-free monitoring on single cells.
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