Serum and plasma beta-carotene levels measured with an improved method of high-performance liquid chromatography |
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Authors: | D W Nierenberg |
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Abstract: | An isocratic high-performance liquid chromatographic method specifically developed to allow simple and rapid determination of beta-carotene concentrations in serum and plasma is reported. Using a method modified from a previously published technique, serum and plasma proteins are denatured by exposure to perchloric acid, and beta-carotene is subsequently extracted into an organic matrix consisting of ethyl acetate-tetrahydrofuran (1:1); no evaporation step is required. Separation is achieved using isocratic elution from a reversed-phase C18 column with UV detection at 436 nm. Recovery of beta-carotene from water and plasma was greater than 98.1%; beta-carotene was stable in the extraction matrix for at least 4 h. Three anticoagulants (oxalate, citrate, and EDTA) caused losses of beta-carotene; perchloric acid and tetrahydrofuran could also destroy beta-carotene under certain conditions. Each run required less than 15 min; within-day coefficient of variation for identical samples averaged 2.3%, between-day coefficient of variation was 4.4% and sensitivity was better than 10 ng/ml. Stability of beta-carotene in plasma was also examined. This method permits a simple, rapid, sensitive, precise, and accurate determination of beta-carotene using 0.5 ml of serum or heparinized plasma. |
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