Abstract
BACKGROUND
The study of ion transport along the renal tubule in vivo or in vitro requires a technique capable of analyzing ion concentrations in sample volumes of only a few nanoliters. This article describes a method for the analysis of cations at physiological concentrations in samples of tubular fluid taken from single renal tubules in vivo. Method. A background electrolyte composed of 2-[N-Morpholino] ethane-sulfonic acid (MES) (50 mmol/liter) and L-histidine (50 mmol/liter; pH congruent with 6.2), with the additives 18-crown-6 (1 mmol/liter) and methanol (30%) was used for the cation separation combined with conductivity detection.
RESULTS
Capillary zone electrophoresis was used to separate NH4, K, Na, Ca, Li, Mg, and Ba in six minutes. Simultaneous quantitative analysis was performed for sodium and potassium, providing detection limits of 0.2 pmol for sodium and 30 fmol for potassium. The calibration plots were linear over three orders of magnitude, including the range of interest to clinical analysis. Data on the reproducibility and repeatability of peak areas and of the repeatability of migration times are reported.
CONCLUSION
The results for sodium and potassium are in close agreement with those obtained by atomic absorption spectrometry, indicating that this is a suitable technique for the routine measurement of these cations in tubule fluid samples.
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