1 / 64

By S Al- Shokair

College of Veterinary Medicine & Animal Resources Department of Clinical Studies Toxicology & Forensic Medicine . Tests For Detection of Toxic Substances in Plants and Pesticides. By S Al- Shokair. Alkaloids Cyanognic Glycosides Chlorinated Hydrocarbone Coumarine Saponins.

calvin
Télécharger la présentation

By S Al- Shokair

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. College of Veterinary Medicine & Animal Resources Department of Clinical Studies Toxicology & Forensic Medicine Tests For Detection of Toxic Substances in Plants and Pesticides By S Al-Shokair

  2. Alkaloids Cyanognic Glycosides Chlorinated Hydrocarbone Coumarine Saponins

  3. Alkaloids

  4. Materials & Methods

  5. Sample distillate (i.ealkaloids -atropine sulphate) 2N HCL Mayer’s reagent Wanger’s reagent Test tubes Pippets Beakers Racks

  6. Alkaloids test reagents

  7. Evaporate 2.5 g of alcoholic extract plant and dry Heat residue on a boiling water bath with 2N HCL Take 5 ml after cooling then filter Divide filtration into two portions Treat one portion with Mayer’s reagent Treat other with Wanger’s reagents

  8. Results

  9. Mayer’s & Wanger’sragents results

  10. Alkaloids result Control

  11. Alkaloids result Mayer’s and Wanger’s reagent

  12. Cyanogenic Glycoside

  13. Prussian Blue Test

  14. Hydrogen cyanide (with the historical common name of Prussic acid) is a chemical compound with chemical formula HCN. Hydrogen cyanide is a colorless, extremely poisonous liquid that boils slightly above room temperature at 26 °C (79 °F). Hydrogen cyanide is a linear molecule, with a triple bond between carbon and nitrogen.

  15. Materials & Methods

  16. Sample distillate (i.e tissue; gastric contents/cyanid) 5% Na OH 2% Ferrous sulphate 10 % Ferric chloride Concentrated HCL Distilled water Pippets Test tubes Beakers Water bath

  17. Prussian blue reagents

  18. ` Make the distillate (5ml) slightly alkaline by 1ml of 5% sodium hydroxide. • Add one or two drops of freshly prepared 2% solution of ferrous sulphate. Add one drop of 10% ferric chloride. Shake well and warm gently on water bath. Cool and add few drops of concentrated hydochloric acid until the brown ferric hydroxide dissolves.

  19. Results

  20. A Prussian-blue precipitate will immediately appear if much cyanide is present A blue or bluish-green colour will appear if cyanide is present in trace only.

  21. Prussian blue result

  22. Styen’s test

  23. Materials & Methods

  24. Sample of distillate or minced material Dilute hydrochloric acid Picric acid 1 g Sodium carbonate 10 g Distilled water 100 A wide-macked flask Filter paper Water bath Beakers

  25. Make a distillate slightly acid by dilute hydrochloric acid in a wide-nacked flask. Colse the flask with a cork having a slit. Soak filter paper with: 1. Picric acid 1g 2. Sodium carbonate 10 g 3. Distilled water 100 ml Dry filter paper in the air. Suspend strip of filter paper Do not touch strips the side of the flask. Incubate the flak at 37C for about 6-12 hours.

  26. Results

  27. Treated filter paper will change from yellow colour to brown colour, if cyanide is present.

  28. Styen’s test result SS

  29. Fujiwara test

  30. Materials & Methods

  31. Fujiwara test reagents

  32. Sample distillate (i.e chlorinated hydrocarbon) Pyridine 10% sodium hydroxide Pippet Water bath Test tubes Beakers

  33. To 5 ml of distillate in a test tube. Add 2ml of pure pyridine. Add 2 ml of 10% sodium hydroxide (Fresh) Place the mixture in a boiling water bath. Observe pyridine layer carefully during a two minutes interval.

  34. Results

  35. A pink or red colour in the pyridine layer will appear if halogenated hydrocarbone is present.

  36. F

  37. Coumarin

  38. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coumarin • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfarin

  39. By bacteria or fungi in damaged plants, moldy hay and spoiled silage. Hay containing 0.002 to 0.003 per cent dicoumarol may poison cattle. Feeding trials with sheep have shown them to be about twice as tolerant.

  40. Sweet clover • (Melilotus alba and M. officinalis

  41. Melilotusofficinalis

  42. Melilotus alba

More Related