Determination of unbound bilirubin in the serum of newborns

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Abstract

An enzymatic assay is described for non albumin bound bilirubin in the serum of newborn infants. Unbound bilirubin is oxidized to colorless compounds by ethyl hydroperoxide in the presence of horseradish peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7), while albumin bound bilirubin is protected from oxidation. Because the equilibrium between albumin and bilirubin occurs rapidly, the oxidation step is rate limiting, and the initial oxidation velocity of total bilirubin is proportional to the unbound bilirubin concentration. By titrating serum with bilirubin in vitro, the association constant and binding capacity of high affinity sites for albumin binding can be determined. Normal human serum albumin tightly binds 1 mole of bilirubin per mole of albumin (binding constant, 2-4 X 108 l/mol). Although weaker secondary binding occurs, the unbound bilirubin fraction increases rapidly after the high affinity binding sites are saturated. Compromised newborns may have a decreased apparent binding capacity and (or) binding affinity. The method can be used to assess the risk of a jaundiced infant for bilirubin encephalopathy.

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APA

Jacobsen, J., & Wennberg, R. P. (1974). Determination of unbound bilirubin in the serum of newborns. Clinical Chemistry, 20(7), 783–789. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/20.7.783

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