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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 16, 85-91, Copyright © 1970 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Dept. of Biochemistry and the General Clinical
Research Center for Children, Wayne State University School
of Medicine, and the Children’s Hospital of Michigan, Detroit,
Mich. 48207.
A direct procedure for measuring serum monosaccharides is presented. Borate intensifies the colors produced when these substances react with o-toluidine, which, in the case of glucose and xylose, have absorption maxima at 480 nm and 630 nm, respectively. Thus, these sugars may be determined singly or simultaneously in a single sample by differential spectrophotometry. An alternative technique in which glucose oxidase and o-toluidine are used is also presented for the estimation of xylose and other pentose sugars in the presence of glucose. These two techniques permit the measurement of a pentose and a hexose other than glucose in protein solutions containing glucose. The techniques have a high degree of correlation and reproducibility. The effects of such variables as reagent concentration, reaction time, and borate concentration on the o-toluidine reaction are presented, along with an evaluation of bilirubin and hemoglobin interference.
Submitted on April 25, 1969
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