Spectrophotometric and electrochemical determinations of L(+) lactate in blood by use of lactate dehydrogenase from yeast

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Abstract

Lactate can be determined rapidly in blood by spectrophotometric and amperometric (enzyme electrode) procedures based on its oxidation by ferricyanide, the reaction being catalyzed with yeast L(+) lactate dehydrogenase (cytochrome b2) (EC 1.1.2.3). In the photometric method lactate can be measured in a few minutes, but blood samples must first be deproteinized. In the amperometric procedure no treatment of blood is needed except ferricyanide addition. The enzyme electrode the authors used has a response time shorter than 1 min when its critical variables are optimized. Preliminary standardization is reduced to minimum operation, because electrode response is proportional to lactate concentration over a wide range (0.1 to 8.0 mol/liter) and many determinations can be done with little cost in enzyme. A simple electrical device ('two electrode device') is described that is well suited for future micro cell construction. Lactate determinations on a series of normal blood samples show no deviation between results by these new methods and the usual ultraviolet spectrophotometric lactate test.

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Durliat, H., Comtat, M., & Baudras, A. (1976). Spectrophotometric and electrochemical determinations of L(+) lactate in blood by use of lactate dehydrogenase from yeast. Clinical Chemistry, 22(11), 1802–1805. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/22.11.1802

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