Reply to Comment on “Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters”. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708
- (1)
- This work was merely evaluating the performance of the instrumentation, and was by no means a method validation study intended for commercial laboratory adoption. The authors would hope that any laboratory considering adaptation of their instrumental parameters would perform the necessary validation work to demonstrate compliance to their intended quality assurance plan or other requirements. In no way do we propose that these parameters be blindly adopted. It is not clear how this impression might have been given to Tiscione.
- (2)
- Tiscione mentions that 85 °C may be “questionable”, but our work is actually recommending a decrease in oven temperature relative to the manufacturers recommendation of 100 °C. Again, our hope was that researchers may find a benefit in the experimental procedure used and the data presented when they consider adapting their laboratory protocols relative to manufacturer recommendations. Even in aqueous standards, we observed a benefit in the lowering of the oven temperature away from the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) specifications.
- (3)
- Tiscione correctly points out that our reported method detection limits (MDL’s) of less than 0.002 g/dL are not in compliance with the MDL procedure we referenced [3]. We could have (should?) reacquired the data with a less concentrated standard for those specific studies, but the main point was that the precision of the analysis was positively affected, resulting in a lower calculated MDL. It may have been better to report variance and not MDL, but given how this calculation is performed they are related and we left this in for consistency against our benchmark, OEM, conditions.
- (4)
- Tiscione points out that we used a 500-µL sample volume and states that “many published methods” require a lower sample volume (ca. 100-µL), and cites 2 references including one of his own. While we have no problem with the goal of using lower sample volumes it was not pertinent to this work, as specifically mentioned in the conclusion: “Variations in sample preparation were of no interest in this analysis.”
- (5)
- Tiscione mentions the obvious coelutions of the t-butanol with various target compounds on both the Agilent DB-ALC1 and the DB-ALC2 columns. Again, this is outside the scope of this publication, and was not a factor given that we were working with reference materials and not live samples that would be more complex. This issue is easily solved by the choice of either a different internal standard (n-propanol) for which we also reported data, or by the choice of alternative GC columns. The publications point was that the two common internal standards (n-propanol and t-butanol) do not necessarily behave equally as various instrumental parameters are changed.
Conflicts of Interest
Reference and Note
- Boswell, H.A.; Dorman, F.L. Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tiscione, N. Comment on: Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708. Separations 2017, 2, 12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Calculate MDL using Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) method for detection of MDL, 40 CFR Part 136. APPENDIX B, revision 1.11.
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Dorman, F.L.; Boswell, H. Reply to Comment on “Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters”. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708. Separations 2017, 4, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations4020013
Dorman FL, Boswell H. Reply to Comment on “Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters”. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708. Separations. 2017; 4(2):13. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations4020013
Chicago/Turabian StyleDorman, Frank L., and Haleigh Boswell. 2017. "Reply to Comment on “Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters”. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708" Separations 4, no. 2: 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations4020013
APA StyleDorman, F. L., & Boswell, H. (2017). Reply to Comment on “Uncertainty of Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Results as Related to Instrumental Conditions: Optimization and Robustness of BAC Analysis Headspace Parameters”. Chromatography 2015, 2, 691–708. Separations, 4(2), 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations4020013