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Measurement of urinary oxalic acid: A comparison of five methods

✍ Scribed by Albrecht Hesse; Daniel Bongartz; Herbert Heynck; Wolfgang Berg


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
544 KB
Volume
29
Category
Article
ISSN
0009-9120

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Objective: Five methods for oxalate analysis in urine are compared with respect to reliability, accuracy, and practicability.

Results: Suppressed and unsuppressed ionchromatography, as well as the enzymatic Sigma-Kit, achieve low coefficients of variation for the within-batch imprecision (1.1-8.0%) and between-day imprecision (1.6-7.2%). The results of these methods are comparable and the mean recovery rate ranges between 99.7% and 100.9%. The enzymatic Boehringer-Kit gives higher CV (3.1-9.5%) and the results are lower than those obtained by the methods mentioned above; the recovery rate is sufficient (92.4%). Conclusion: The handling of the chromatographic methods is very easy, whereas the enzymatic methods require more manual work. In relation to sample throughput, charges for the enzymatic methods are about twice as high as for the chromatographic methods. In respect to reliability and accuracy, the chromotropic acid method cannot be recommended (recovery rate 68%).


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