Direct determination of zinc in serum by zeeman atomic absorption spectrometry with a graphite furnace

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Abstract

We developed a precise and accurate graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometric method for the direct determination of zinc in serum. Serum samples are analyzed after 20-fold dilution with water of ultrapure analytical grade. No other reagent is used, from the moment of sampling until measurement. During atomization, the argon flow is kept at 150 mL/min instead of gas stop, to decrease the sensitivity and thus allow lower dilution ratios. Zinc concentrations are determined against a serum-matched calibration curve. Graphite tubes are uncoated and no L'vov platform is used. Between-run CVs were 5.9%, 3.5%, and 1.9% for serum zinc concentrations of 0.93, 1.15, and 1.43 mg/L, respectively. The characteristic mass was 9 pg, and the detection limit (X̄blank + 3SDblank) was 0.060 mg/L.

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D’Haese, P. C., Lamberts, L. V., Vanheule, A. O., & De Broe, M. E. (1992). Direct determination of zinc in serum by zeeman atomic absorption spectrometry with a graphite furnace. Clinical Chemistry, 38(12), 2439–2443. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/38.12.2439

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