Lay J O, Holder C L, Cooper W M
Division of Biochemical Toxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, Arkansas 72079.
Biomed Environ Mass Spectrom. 1989 Mar;18(3):157-67. doi: 10.1002/bms.1200180303.
We have examined the synthetic N-oxides of five ethylenediamine-type antihistamines using fast atom bombardment (FAB) mass spectrometry and FAB tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Fragmentation of the protonated molecule in the normal and collisionally activated spectra appeared to be characteristic for this class of antihistamine N-oxide. Spectra were also acquired from an ethanolamine and a propylamine antihistamine N-oxide for comparison. These results were very similar to those obtained from biologically produced antihistamine N-oxides, as well as isomeric metabolites, which were readily distinguished from the N-oxides by characteristic fragmentation. In addition, a prominent ion 16 daltons lower in mass, which has been attributed to loss of elemental oxygen from the protonated N-oxide in chemical ionization mass spectral studies, was shown to be a matrix-dependent product of the solution-phase reduction of the antihistamine N-oxide to the parent antihistamine during FAB ionization. These results demonstrate that with a non-reducing matrix such as glycerol, FAB mass spectrometry and FAB MS/MS are excellent methods for the characterization of the non-conjugated antihistamine metabolites such as the N-oxides.