Detalhes do Documento

Mass spectrometry‐based approaches to assess the botanical authenticity of dietary supplements

Autor(es): Grazina, Liliana ; Mafra, Isabel ; Monaci, Linda ; Amaral, Joana S.

Data: 2023

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10198/31182

Origem: Biblioteca Digital do IPB

Assunto(s): Adulteration; Botanical origin; Plant food supplements; Targeted MS; Untargeted MS


Descrição

Dietary supplements are legally considered foods despite frequently including medicinal plants as ingredients. Currently, the consumption of herbal dietary supplements, also known as plant food supplements (PFS), is increasing worldwide and some raw botanicals, highly demanded due to their popularity, extensive use, and/orwell-established pharmacological effects, have been attaining high prices in the international markets. Therefore, botanical adulteration for profit increase can occur along the whole PFS industry chain, from raw botanicals to plant extracts, until final PFS. Besides the substitution of highvalue species, unintentional mislabeling can happen in morphologically similar species. Both cases represent a health risk for consumers, prompting the development of numerous works to access botanical adulterations in PFS. Among different approaches proposed for this purpose, mass spectrometry (MS)-based techniques have often been reported as the most promising, particularly when hyphenated with chromatographic techniques. Thus, this review aims at describing an overview of the developments in this field, focusing on the applications of MS-based techniques to targeted and untargeted analysis to detect botanical adulterations in plant materials, extracts, and PFS.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Biblioteca Digital do IPB
Licença CC
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