tempo and 1-2-diaminobenzene

tempo has been researched along with 1-2-diaminobenzene* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for tempo and 1-2-diaminobenzene

ArticleYear
An automated assay for measuring serum ascorbic acid with use of 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxy, free radical and o-phenylenediamine.
    Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry, 2000, Volume: 301, Issue:1-2

    We developed a novel, cost-effective, and automated assay for ascorbic acid (AsA) in serum using a COBAS MIRA S analyzer (Roche Diagnostic System). Our method has a wide dynamic range and covers AsA concentrations from well below the lower reference interval to well above it. AsA is oxidized by 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxy, free radical (TEMPO) to dehydroascorbic acid (DAsA). The latter condenses with o-phenylenediamine (OPDA) to form a quinoxaline derivative that absorbs light at 340 nm. The change in absorbance at 340 nm is proportional to the concentration of AsA in the specimen. The automated system permitted the assay of 65 specimens per hour at a cost of approximately US$ 0.01 per specimen for reagents. The assay can be applied directly to serum specimens (direct method) and also to sera with a prior deproteinization step with metaphosphoric acid. The detection limit for the direct serum assays is 0.8 vs. 0.4 mg/l with the deproteinization method. The recovery of AsA from a supplemented serum pool was of >95% for both procedures. We used four distinct methods on 66 patients sera. The direct method for AsA correlated well with an HPLC method (r=0.964, P<0.001); the direct method also correlated well with a method that uses AsA oxidase (r=0.975, P<0. 001). The deproteinization method correlated well with HPLC (r=0.981, P<0.001), and with the AsA oxidase procedure (r=0.994, P<0.001). Ten within-day determinations on a serum pool gave a C.V. <4.3% for both the direct and deproteinization procedures. The between-day assays of the same serum pool over 10 days gave a C.V. of <6.7% by both methods.

    Topics: Artifacts; Ascorbic Acid; Automation; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electrochemistry; Free Radicals; Phenylenediamines; Reference Standards; Reproducibility of Results

2000