Mapping the chemistry of hair strands by mass spectrometry imaging - A Review
Journal article, 2021

Hair can record chemical information reflecting our living conditions, and, therefore, strands of hair have become a potent analytical target within the biological and forensic sciences. While early efforts focused on analyzing complete hair strands in bulk, high spatial resolution mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) has recently come to the forefront of chemical hair-strand analysis. MSI techniques offer a localized analysis, requiring fewer de-contamination procedures per default and making it possible to map the distribution of analytes on and within individual hair strands. Applying the techniques to hair samples has proven particularly useful in investigations quantifying the exposure to, and uptake of, toxins or drugs. Overall, MSI, combined with optimized sample preparation protocols, has improved precision and accuracy for identifying several elemental and molecular species in single strands of hair. Here, we review different sample preparation protocols and use cases with a view to make the methodology more accessible to researchers outside of the field of forensic science. We conclude that-although some challenges remain, including contamination issues and matrix effects-MSI offers unique opportunities for obtaining highly resolved spatial information of several compounds simultaneously across hair surfaces.

Mass spectrometry imaging

Sample preparation

Hair analysis

Author

Mai H. Philipsen

Lund University

Emma R. Haxen

Lund University

Auraya Manaprasertsak

Lund University

Per Malmberg

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Emma U. Hammarlund

Lund University

Molecules

1420-3049 (ISSN) 14203049 (eISSN)

Vol. 26 24 7522

Subject Categories

Information Studies

Analytical Chemistry

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.3390/molecules26247522

PubMed

34946604

More information

Latest update

1/10/2022