Urinary oxalate determination by use of immobilized oxalate oxidase in a continuous-flow system

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Abstract

In this procedure, oxalate oxidase (EC 1.2.3.4) immobilized in a continuous-flow system is used to determine oxalate in urine. The hydrogen peroxide formed from oxalate is detected by use of a color reaction with peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7), 3-methyl-2-benzothiazoline hydrazine, and N,N-dimethylalanine. However, urine contains an oxalate oxidase inhibitor, which cannot be removed by heating, ion-exchange resins, or cellulose columns. This makes it necessary to precipitate the oxalate before assay. The overall assay system is accurate (oxalate recovery, 95.9%), sensitive (≤5 μmol/L), precise (within-batch CV <1.25%, between-batch CV <5%), and relatively rapid (60 samples per working day). The assay system has better accuracy than an established chemical method and a gas-chromatographic method, and is considerably less arduous than and correlates well (r = 0.94) with a modified chemical method. The reference interval for urinary oxalate excretion is 0.16-0.56 mmol per day (n = 97). Only nonphysiological concentrations of ascorbate interfere with the assay, by increasing the oxalate result in the overall assay, presumably by post-micturition formation of oxalate from ascorbate in the urine samples

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Potezny, N., Bais, R., O’Loughlin, P. D., Edwards, J. B., Rofe, A. M., & Conyers, R. A. (1983). Urinary oxalate determination by use of immobilized oxalate oxidase in a continuous-flow system. Clinical Chemistry, 29(1), 16–20. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/29.1.16

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