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Journal Article

Citation

Sankaralingam A, Thomas A, James D, Wierzbicki AS. Ann. Clin. Biochem. 2016; 54(4): 501-503.

Affiliation

St Thomas Hospital.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Royal Society of Medicine Press)

DOI

10.1177/0004563216672892

PMID

27687084

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ethylene glycol (EG) poisoning remains a rare but important presentation to acute toxicology units. Guidelines recommended that Ethylene Glycol should be available as an 'urgent' test within 4 hours but these are difficult to deliver in practice. This study assessed a semi-quantitative enzymatic spectrophotometric assay for EG compatible with automated platforms.

METHODS: The EG method was assessed in 21 samples from patients with an increased anion gap and metabolic acidosis not due to EG ingestion, and 7 samples known to contain EG. All samples were analysed in random order in a blinded-manner to their origin on a laboratory spectrophotometer.

RESULTS: In this study, 7 samples were known to contain EG at concentrations >100mg/L. The method correctly identified all 7 samples as containing EG. No false positives were observed. 13 samples gave clear negative results. EG was present at <20mg/L in one sample, but this sample remained within the limits of the negative control. Passing-Bablock correlation of estimates of EG concentration against results obtained when the samples had been analysed using the quantitative method on an automated analyser showed a good correlation (R=0.84) but with an apparent under-recovery.

CONCLUSIONS: A semi-quantitative assay for EG was able to discriminate well between samples containing EG and those with other causes of acidosis. It is a practical small-scale assay for rapid identification of cases of EG-poisoning.

© 2016 Sage Publications, Inc.


Language: en

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