Abstract

A sensitive and selective laser-induced luminescence detection scheme for orotic acid in urine, separated by micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatography (MEKC) has been developed. The 325 nm line from a helium cadmium laser is used to excite orotic acid, which transfers its energy to terbium. Resultant luminescence of terbium is linear with orotic acid concentration over more than 2.5 orders of magnitude. This novel and practical system enables the detection of 50 nm orotic acid in urine in less than 1.5 minutes while using only nanoliters of sample. The significant decrease in analysis time over traditional methods (spectrophotometric and chromatographic) comes from the high efficiency of MEKC. A dramatic improvement in sensitivity and selectivity over UV detection in capillary electrophoresis is achieved through the use of laser-induced lanthanide ion energy transfer luminescence detection. Finally, no sample pretreatment is needed and the method is free from any known interferences in urine.

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