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Comparison of techniques for minimizing interference of bilirubin on serum creatinine determined by the kinetic Jaffé reaction

✍ Scribed by Porntip H. Lolekha; Noppmats Sritong


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
758 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0887-8013

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✦ Synopsis


This study compared the effect of sodium dodecyl-sulfate, potassium ferricyanide, and preincubation technique to continuous-flow analysis and prior deproteinization to correct the negative interference of bilirubin on serum creatinine found by the kinetic Jaff6 reaction. Bilirubin increased to 684 Fmol/L did not interfere with serum creatinine measured by the methods incorporated with dialysis or deproteinization. Trichloroacetic acid was the best protein precipitant. The reagent incorporated with sodium dodecyl sulfate was more appropriate to minimize bilirubin interference than reagent containing potassium ferricyanide. An increase in potassium ferricyanide concentration resulted in false posi-tive creatinine values. Incorporation of both SDS and potassium ferricyanide in the reagent did not help in minimizing the bilirubin interference over use of each chemical alone. The 10 minutes of preincubation of the sample with alkaline buffer incorporating with either SDS or potassium ferricyanide before starting the Jaffe reaction was the appropriate way to overcome unconjugated bilirubin interference at a level of 342.0 ymol/L. However, the technique did not work uniformly with icteric patient sera containing conjugated, unconjugated, and delta bilirubin. This is a challenging problem that remains to be solved by the clinical chemist. o 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.


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## Abstract The negative interference of conjugated, unconjugated, and delta bilirubin on patient serum creatinine determined by the kinetic Jaffe reaction is the unresolved problem. We compared bilirubin interference on thirty patients’ serum creatinine obtained from four analyzers, with and witho