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Simple microplate method for determination of urinary iodine.

Clinical chemistry (2000-04-12)
T Ohashi, M Yamaki, C S Pandav, M G Karmarkar, M Irie
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Urinary iodine is a good biochemical marker for control of iodine deficiency disorders. Our aim was to develop and validate a simple, rapid, and quantitative method based on the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction, incorporating both the reaction and the digestion process into a microplate format. Using a specially designed sealing cassette to prevent loss of vapor and cross-contamination among wells, ammonium persulfate digestion was performed in a microplate in an oven at 110 degrees C for 60 min. After the digestion mixture was transferred to a transparent microplate and the Sandell-Kolthoff reaction was performed at 25 degrees C for 30 min, urinary iodine was measured by a microplate reader at 405 nm. The mean recovery of iodine added to urine was 98% (range, 89-109%). The theoretical detection limit, defined as 2 SD from the zero calibrator, was 0.11 micromol/L (14 microg/L iodine). The mean intra- and interassay CVs for samples with iodine concentrations of 0.30-3.15 micromol/L were < or = 10%. The new method agreed well with the conventional chloric acid digestion method (n = 70; r = 0.991; y = 0.944x + 0.04; S(y|x) = 0.10) and with the inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry method (n = 61; r = 0.979; y = 0.962x + 0.03; S(y|x) = 0.20). The agreement was confirmed by difference plots. The distributions of iodine concentrations for samples from endemic areas of iodine deficiency diseases showed similar patterns among the above three methods. Our new method, incorporating the whole process into a microplate format, is readily applicable and allows rapid monitoring of urinary iodine.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Ammoniumcer(IV)-sulfat Dihydrat, puriss. p.a., ACS reagent, ≥98.0% (RT)