Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 30: 1664-1666, 1984;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 30, 1664-1666, Copyright © 1984 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Reaction of picrate with creatinine and cepha antibiotics

MH Kroll, C Hagengruber and RJ Elin

The concentration of creatinine in serum, which is used to estimate glomerular filtration rate, is measured by reaction with alkaline picrate, but this reaction is not specific for creatinine. Although several other cephalosporin antibiotics have been reported not to react with picrate, we reacted picrate with creatinine, cefoxitin, penicillin, and eight different cephalosporins, and found that all compounds reacted with picrate and showed superimposable spectrophotograms with absorption maxima at 485 nm. From these results we conclude that the color-absorbing moiety of the product is the picrate molecule. Further, the structure common to creatinine and the cephalosporins, cefoxitin, or penicillin is the carbonyl group attached to a nitrogen and a carbon atom. We postulate that the carbonyl group with the adjacent carbon and nitrogen atoms is probably the chemical moiety that reacts with picrate to absorb energy at 485 nm.


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K. Piveral, S. C. Miller, D. R. Baird, and R. A. Pleasants
Apparently Raised Serum Creatinine Levels due to Cephalosporins
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[Abstract] [PDF]




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