Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire Central de Biochimie, Centre Hospitalier de Bicetre, Kremlin-Bicetre, France
Abstract
Abstract
We determined methemoglobin in blood by zero-crossing-point first-derivative spectrophotometry. After lysis of erythrocytes, hemoglobin was converted into oxyhemoglobin and the first derivative spectrum was recorded between 405 and 425 nm. At the exact point where the first-derivative spectrum of oxyhemoglobin was zero ("zero-crossing point"), the first-derivative value of oxyhemoglobin and methemoglobin mixture was proportional to the methemoglobin concentration. The standard curve was linear for all proportions of methemoglobin. Within-assay precision (CV) was 3.4% for a 20% methemoglobin content. Correlation with results by the Evelyn and Malloy method was very good for high proportions of methemoglobin (greater than 10%), but the proposed technique was far better for low methemoglobin percentages because of its linearity, its high sensitivity, and its low detection limit.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry
Cited by
15 articles.
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