potassium-thiocyanate and chloric-acid

potassium-thiocyanate has been researched along with chloric-acid* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for potassium-thiocyanate and chloric-acid

ArticleYear
Validation of a simple, manual urinary iodine method for estimating the prevalence of iodine-deficiency disorders, and interlaboratory comparison with other methods.
    The American journal of clinical nutrition, 1997, Volume: 65, Issue:5

    The measurement of urinary iodine in population-based surveys provides a biological indicator of the severity of iodine-deficiency disorders. We describe the steps performed to validate a simple, inexpensive, manual urinary iodine acid digestion method, and compare the results using this method with those of other urinary iodine methods. Initially, basic performance characteristics were evaluated: the average recovery of added iodine was 100.4 +/- 8.7% (mean +/- SD), within-assay precision (CV) over the assay range 0-0.95 mumol/L (0-12 micrograms/dL) was < 6%, between-assay precision over the same range was < 12%, and assay sensitivity was 0.05 mumol/L (0.6 microgram/dL). There were no apparent effects on the method by thiocyanate, a known interfering substance. In a comparison with five other methods performed in four different laboratories, samples were collected to test the method performance over a wide range of urinary iodine values (0.04-3.7 mumol/L, or 0.5-47 micrograms/dL). There was a high correlation between all methods and the interpretation of the results was consistent. We conclude that the simple, manual acid digestion method is suitable for urinary iodine analysis.

    Topics: Arsenic; Cerium; Chemistry, Clinical; Chlorates; Humans; Iodine; Laboratories; Oxidation-Reduction; Quality Control; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Spectrophotometry; Thiocyanates

1997