Abstract
Abstract
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid), commonly taken as a dietary supplement and excreted in the urine, can interfere with peroxidase redox indicator systems such as those used in reagent-strip tests for urinary glucose and hemoglobin. We investigated whether the concentrations of ascorbic acid in urine after modest supplementary doses of vitamin C are high enough to interfere with such dipstick tests. After adding glucose or hemoglobin to urine collected from persons not taking vitamin C and from persons taking 350 to 1000 mg of vitamin C daily, we tested four reagent strips for interference and found that these commonly taken doses did frequently interfere with all test systems examined.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Biochemistry, medical,Clinical Biochemistry
Cited by
13 articles.
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