Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1968164 Clinica Chimica Acta 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe quantification of serum bilirubin fractions has been widely performed with both the diazo-method and an enzymatic method; however, the accuracy of these methods has not been evaluated because quantitative fractional high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) reference methods have yet to be established.MethodsSamples were analyzed using HPLC and Shodex® Asahipak GS-320HQ columns. Human serum was subjected to HPLC using direct injection, then eluted with acetonitrile: 0.3 mol/l phosphate buffer (pH 6.5) containing 1% Brij 35 and 0.08% sodium ascorbate (30 : 70, v/v).ResultsSerum bilirubin was separated into 4 fractions; retention times of 9.24, 19.92, 24.07, 35.75 min were identified as δ bilirubin, bilirubin diglucuronide, bilirubin monoglucuronide, and unconjugated bilirubin, respectively. Mean recovery was 93.0%–99.2%. Total precision of peak retention time, height and area exhibited < 4.26% variation. Detection range was 3.1 to 348 mg/l. Hemoglobin (6 g/l) and immunoglobins produced a small positive interference. β-carotene (20 mg/l), vitamin-B2 (370 μg/l) and B12 (9.5 μg/l) did not interfere with this analysis. Results (n = 30) with this method were closely correlated to those by Adachi's HPLC method as r = 0.9941 to 0.9960, slope = 0.88 to 1.27, intercept = − 3.2 to + 4.9, for each fraction.ConclusionsSince this method was a precise quantitative HPLC method for serum bilirubin fractionation, it might be used to evaluate the accuracy and the characteristics of various routine methods for bilirubin measurement.

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