PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Feb 2011)

A low-tech analytical method for diethylcarbamazine citrate in medicated salt.

  • Abigail Weaver,
  • Patrick Brown,
  • Shannon Huey,
  • Marco Magallon,
  • E Brennan Bollman,
  • Dominique Mares,
  • Thomas G Streit,
  • Marya Lieberman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
p. e1005

Abstract

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The World Health Organization has called for an effort to eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis (LF) around the world. In regions where the disease is endemic, local production and distribution of medicated salt dosed with diethylcarbamazine (DEC) has been an effective method for eradicating LF. A partner of the Notre Dame Haiti program, Group SPES in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, produces a medicated salt called Bon Sel. Coarse salt is pre-washed and sprayed with a solution of DEC citrate and potassium iodate. Iodine levels are routinely monitored on site by a titrimetric method. However, the factory had no method for monitoring DEC. Critical analytical issues include 1) determining whether the amount of DEC in each lot of Bon Sel is within safe and therapeutically useful limits, 2) monitoring variability within and between production runs, and 3) determining the effect of a common local practice (washing salt before use) on the availability of DEC. This paper describes a novel titrimetric method for analysis of DEC citrate in medicated salt. The analysis needs no electrical power and requires only a balance, volumetric glassware, and burets that most salt production programs have on hand for monitoring iodine levels. The staff of the factory used this analysis method on site to detect underloading of DEC on the salt by their sprayer and to test a process change that fixed the problem.