Most likely, no. To do analysis on these things, you need a lab set up to look for these compds. Even taking an existing lab, and using the right techniques, would be a LOT of cash. Finally, chemical analysis is inheriently dirty (solvents to dispose of) and there usually is a health organization that monitors the labs (more charges.) It would be at minimium a couple of hundred bucks (doubtful) and could go much higher than that.
If there was a research lab, they might do it, but they usually ignore the public. Most of the time the public makes obsurd demands on the analysis.
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