Evaluation of a direct fluorometric method for determination of serum retinol.

1986 
We evaluated the usefulness of a fluorometric method for determining serum retinol (Futterman et al., Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1975;14:125-30) in which fluorescence (excitation 335 nm; emission 460 nm) of retinol is directly measured in unextracted, diluted serum. Using serum from 466 individual donors, we compared values so obtained with those by a "high-performance" liquid-chromatographic method. The correlation coefficient (r) was 0.74. When we compared fluorometric retinol values with retinol-binding protein values for the 466 samples, r was 0.71. About 1% of the 466 samples had markedly higher values by fluorometry than by chromatography, the result of positive interferences. For two serum pools, we obtained CVs of 1.58% (n = 57) and 1.79% (n = 57) in long-term precision studies lasting 60 days. Although the fluorometric method of Futterman et al. has not been widely adopted, we find that it is simple to perform and that results compare favorably with the chromatographic method in precision and accuracy. It is unique among commonly used serum retinol methods in that the serum need not be extracted with organic solvents.
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