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ISSN print edition: 0366-6352
ISSN electronic edition: 1336-9075
Registr. No.: MK SR 9/7
Published monthly
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Quantitative analysis of two adulterants in Cynanchum stauntonii by near-infrared spectroscopy combined with multi-variate calibrations
Wen-Jiang Dong, Yong-Nian Ni, and Serge Kokot
State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Nanchang University, Nanchang, 330047 China
E-mail: ynni@ncu.edu.cn
Abstract: Authentication of traditional Chinese medicines (TCMs) has become important because they can be adulterated with relatively
cheap herbal medicines similar in appearance. Detection of such adulterated samples is needed because their presence is likely
to reduce the pharmacological potency of the original TCM and, in the worst cases, the samples may be harmful. The aim of
this study was to develop a rapid near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) analytical method which was supported by multi-variate
calibration, e.g. partial least squares regression (PLSR) and radial basis function artificial neural networks (RBF-ANN),
in order to quantify the TCM and the adulterants. In this work, Cynanchum stauntonii (CS), a commonly used TCM, in mixtures with one or two adulterants — two morphological types of TCM, Cynanchum atrati (CA) and Cynanchum paniculati (CP), were determined using NIR reflectance spectroscopy. The three sample sets, CS adulterated with CA or CP, and CS with
both CA and CP, were measured in the range of 800–2500 nm. Both PLSR and RBF-ANN calibration models provided satisfactory
results, even at an adulteration level of 5 mass %, but the RBF-ANN models with better root mean square error of prediction
(RMSEP) values for CS, CA, and CP arguably performed better. Consequently, this work demonstrates that the NIR method of sampling
complex mixtures of similar substances such as CS adulterated by CA and/or CP is capable of producing data suitable for the
quantitative analysis of mixtures consisting of the original TCM adulterated by one or two similar substances, provided the
spectral data are interrogated by multi-variate methods of data analysis such as PLS or RBF-ANN.
Keywords: near-infrared spectroscopy – Cynanchum stauntonii – adulterants – Cynanchum atrati – Cynanchum paniculati – RBF-ANN calibration – chemometrics
Full paper is available at www.springerlink.com.
DOI: 10.2478/s11696-012-0231-6
Chemical Papers 66 (12) 1083–1091 (2012)
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