1. The Header Information

At the top of the report you’ll usually see information like:

  • Work Order:  Sample ID:  Received:  Issued:  Revision: Page:

What this tells you

These identifiers let you see important information about what is being tested, and for which company.

Sample ID

  • Unique identifier for the tested material. Should correspond to the vendor’s batch or lot number, if they use them.

Received Date – When the lab received the sample.

Issued Date – When the final report was produced.


2. Understanding the Table Structure

Most CoAs use a table format like this:

| Parameter | Specification | Result | Unit | LOQ | Notes |

Each column answers a different question.


3. Parameter (What Is Being Tested)

The Parameter column lists the substance or compound the lab is testing for.

  • This can be alkaloids for strength, or solvents for safety.

  • For instance the section might be labeled.
    Mitragyna Alkaloids
    Residual Solvents: Class III (GC-MS)

This simply indicates the category of solvents tested using a specific analytical method.


4. Specification (The Acceptable Limit)

The Specification column shows the maximum amount allowed for each compound.

What NMT Means

NMT = Not More Than

Example:

Methanol
Specification: NMT 3000 ug/g

This means:

The sample should contain no more than 3000 micrograms per gram of methanol.

The specification column is essentially the rule or threshold used to evaluate the result.


5. Result (What the Lab Measured)

The Result column shows the actual measurement from the instrument.

Numeric Result

Example: Methanol: 80

This means the lab measured 80 units of that compound in the sample.


“< LOQ” Result

This means:

The substance was below the lab’s measurable quantification limit.

It does not necessarily mean zero, only that it is below the threshold the instrument can measure accurately.


6. Unit (How the Measurement Is Expressed)

The Unit column tells you the scale used to report the measurement.

In this report the unit is:

ug/g

What ug/g Means

ug/g = micrograms per gram

This is equivalent to: parts per million (ppm)

Example: 132 ug/g = 132 ppm

This unit expresses how much of a substance exists relative to the sample weight.


7. LOQ (Limit of Quantification)

The LOQ column is one of the most important things for readers to understand.

What LOQ Means –LOQ = Limit of Quantification

This is the lowest concentration the instrument can measure reliably.

Example: LOQ: 75 ug/g

This means: The lab’s instrument cannot confidently measure values below 75 ug/g.

If the result reads: < LOQ

It means the substance could be: 0 – 10 – 30 – 70

But the instrument cannot quantify it precisely below 75.


8. Notes (Interpretation of the Result)

The Notes column usually summarizes whether the measurement met the specification.

In this report the note is:

PASS

This simply means:

The measured result is within the specification limit.


9. Testing Method

Near the middle of the report you see:

Residual Solvents: Class III (GC-MS)
Method Code: T201

GC-MS
That means they tested for the solvents using

GC-MS = Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry

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