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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 19, 977-983, Copyright © 1973 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Departments of Medical Microbiology and Pediatrics,
College of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; and
The Children’s Hospital Research Foundation, Children’s Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 43205.
We developed a microcolumn adsorption chromatographic technique for assay of plasma retinol. A petroleum ether extract of plasma was fractionated on silicic acid, to isolate retinol. The first eluent, petroleum ether, removed "unidentified fluorescent contaminant" (UFC); the second eluent, cyclohexene, removed traces of UFC and retinyl palmitate. Retinol was eluted by the third eluent, cymeme (p-isopropyl toluene). No recognized plasma vitamin A derivatives, other than retinol, were detectable in the cymene eluate. With the procedure, we could detect a minimum concentration of 7 µg of retinol per deciliter of plasma. Sixty-six plasmas from preschool children were assayed by our "cymene assay," and by the NeeldPearson modification of the CarrPrice procedure, the method of Thompson et al., and the column assay of Garry et al. Results by the latter three procedures were similar (P >0.025): the mean plasma retinol ranged from 29.4 to 31.2 (SD, ± 5.8 to 7.4) µg/dl. By the present assay the same samples contained 24.5 (SD, ± 6.8) µg/dl; significantly more was detected by the other procedures (P <0.001). This difference (16-22%) between the cymene assay for retinol and other assays for total vitamin A may reflect, in part, the concentration of other vitamin A derivatives in plasma.
Submitted on March 14, 1973
Accepted on June 4, 1973
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