Abstract: | A method for analysis of metabolic profiles of free and conjugated steroids in milk has been developed. Milk is diluted with aqueous triethylamine sulphate and liquid-solid extraction is achieved on a Sep-Pak C18 cartridge at 60-64 degrees C. Steroids are purified by chromatography on small columns of Lipidex 5000 and sulphohydroxypropyl Sephadex LH-20 [H+] prior to separation into neutral and phenolic compounds, glucuronide, mono- and disulphate conjugate groups on the lipophilic strong anion exchanger triethylaminohydroxypropyl Sephadex LH-20 (TEAP-LH-20). Conjugated steroids are released by enzymatic or solvolytic procedures and separated into a neutral and a phenolic fraction on TEAP-LH-20. The O-methyloxime and trimethylsilyl ether derivatives of the steroids are analyzed by capillary column gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Fifty steroids were identified in milk collected from women a few days after delivery. Quantitatively about 80% were present as sulphates, 15% as glucuronides and only 5% were unconjugated steroids. The steroid pattern was similar to that in late pregnancy plasma with pregnanolone, pregnanediol and pregnanetriol isomers and dehydroepiandrosterone being predominant. About 10% of the steroid content consisted of estrogens. The total concentration of steroids 2 days after delivery was 20-116 ng/ml, i.e. about 1-5% of the concentration was about 10 ng/ml 1 month after delivery. In one milk sample, collected 2 days after delivery, the steroid concentration (3.6 micrograms/ml) was similar to that in plasma. |