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Ions In Physiological Fluids

Applications | 1995 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Ion chromatography
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Significance of the Topic

Ion chromatography analysis of physiological fluids remains critical to clinical diagnostics due to its ability to quantify inorganic anions, organic acids, and cations in complex biological matrices. Elevated or diminished ion concentrations in urine, plasma, or serum serve as biomarkers for conditions such as lactic acidosis, hyperoxaluria, gout, electrolyte disturbances, and renal or hepatic disorders.

Objectives and Study Overview

This application note aimed to develop a robust ion chromatography method for simultaneous determination of common anions and cations in physiological fluids using suppressed conductivity detection. The study focused on minimal sample preparation, high sensitivity, and reliable quantitation of analytes including chloride, nitrate, phosphate, sulfate, sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, and relevant organic acids.

Instrumentation Used

  • Dionex DX 500 system
  • Gradient pump GP40
  • Conductivity detector CD20
  • Chromatography modules LC10/LC20
  • PeakNet chromatography workstation
  • IonPac AS11 analytical and AG11 guard columns with ATC-1 suppressor
  • IonPac CS12A analytical and CG12A guard columns with CSRS suppressor

Methodology

A low-blank sodium hydroxide gradient (0.5–38 mM) enabled separation of monovalent to trivalent anions with the ASRS suppressor in recycle mode. Cation separations employed 18 mN sulfuric acid eluent with the CSRS suppressor. Sample preparation included simple dilution for urine and acetonitrile deproteinization for plasma or serum. Injection volumes ranged from 10 to 25 µL.

Main Results and Discussion

  • Complete resolution of key anions and organic acids in standard mixtures and biological samples within 38 minutes.
  • Recoveries for anions in urine, plasma, and serum ranged from 90 to 103 % with RSD below 6 %.
  • Cation separation of Li, Na, NH₄, K, Mg, and Ca completed in under 12 minutes with recoveries between 95 and 110 % and RSD less than 1.5 %.
  • Suppression mechanisms significantly reduced background conductivity and enhanced analyte signals by replacing eluent ions with hydronium or hydroxide ions.

Benefits and Practical Applications

  • High sensitivity at low mg/L levels and wide linear dynamic range.
  • Minimal sample preparation and rapid analysis improve workflow in clinical and research laboratories.
  • Enhanced specificity and reproducibility compared to colorimetric assays, atomic spectroscopy, or ion-selective electrodes.
  • Applicable to routine monitoring of electrolytes and organic acid biomarkers for disease diagnosis and therapy management.

Future Trends and Potential Applications

Advances may include coupling to mass spectrometry for structural confirmation, further miniaturization with microbore columns, automated on-line sample cleanup, and development of multiplexed suppressors for improved throughput. Emerging applications will target personalized medicine with real-time metabolic profiling and expanded analyte panels in point-of-care diagnostics.

Conclusion

The described ion chromatography methods leveraging self-regenerating suppressors deliver accurate, sensitive, and rapid quantitation of inorganic and organic ions in physiological fluids. These approaches enhance clinical diagnostics and research capabilities by combining minimal sample handling with robust separation and detection.

References

  1. Ohsawa K.; Yoshimura Y.; Watanabe S.; Tanaka H.; Yokota A.; Tamura K. Anal. Sci. 1986, 2, 165.
  2. Lewis D. Biochem. J. 1951, 48, 175–180.
  3. Ishigami K.; Inoue K. Res. Bull. Obihiro Univ. 1976, 10, 45–55.
  4. Osweiler G.D.; Carson T.L.; Buck W.B.; Van Gelder G. Clin. Diagn. Vet. Toxicol. 1985, 1A, 460–467.
  5. Bradley W.H.; Eppson H.E.; Beath O.A. J. Am. Vet. Med. Assoc. 1939, 94, 541–542.
  6. Pesce A.J.; Kaplan L.A. Methods in Clin. Chem. 1987, 5, 27–87.

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