Literature DB >> 509698

Gas-chromatographic estimation of urinary oxalate and its comparison with a colorimetric method.

C J Farrington, A H Chalmers.   

Abstract

We describe a simple, specific gas-chromatographic method for urinary oxalate. Its specificity was evaluated by precipitating the oxalate as its calcium salt from urine, followed by methylation of the oxalate with boron trifluoride/methanol and subsequent gas-chromatographic separation and quantitation of the dimethyl oxalate. [U-14C]Oxalate and n-decanoic acid are used as internal standards. Analytical recoveries ranged from 93.8 to 97.7% for oxalate-supplemented urine. Twenty replicate analyses of urines containing typical concentrations of oxalate gave CVs of 10.0, 9.1, and 8.3% for low, medium, and high concentrations, respectively. Day-to-day precision (CV) for single analyses repeated on 20 days was 8.6% for the low urinary oxalate concentration. The lower limit of detection of urinary oxalate is 25 mumol/L. Results by our method correlated well (r = 0.95) with those by a colorimetric method (Clin. Chim. Acta 36: 127, 1972) but averaged 68.4% of those obtained colorimetrically (n = 75 samples, p less than 0.001). The expected range for our method is calculated to be 80 to 500 mumol of oxalate per 24-h urine (mean +/- 1 SD: 280 +/- 100).

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Year:  1979        PMID: 509698

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem        ISSN: 0009-9147            Impact factor:   8.327


  2 in total

1.  Conductivometric determination of urinary oxalate with oxalate decarboxylase.

Authors:  M Bishop; H Freudiger; U Largiadèr; J D Sallis; R Felix; H Fleisch
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  1982

2.  Urinary calcium and oxalate excretion in children.

Authors:  G S Reusz; M Dobos; D Byrd; P Sallay; M Miltényi; T Tulassay
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  1995-02       Impact factor: 3.714

  2 in total

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