Abstract

An enzymatic assay method for the determination of urinary formic acid is described. Formic acid in urine was cleaved to carbon dioxide and water by formic acid dehydrogenase, whereby NAD+ was converted to NADH, which reacted with INT (p-iodonitrotetrazolium violet) in the presence of NAD-diaphorase. The color thus produced was determined at 500 nm. In addition, a simple gas chromatographic method of urinary formic acid is described, in which head space gas of formic acid methylester was applied into the wide bore column. The urinary formic acid concentrations by the enzymatic method agreed well with that by the gas chromatographic method. A simple gas chromatographic method for urinary methanol assay is also described. Acetonitrile was added to an equal volume of urine containing methanol. After centrifugation, the supernatant was injected into gas chromatography (GC). The peaks of urinary methanol and ethanol were separated by GC. Formic acid and methanol in urine of unexposed healthy subjects and workers exposed to methanol were analyzed by the colorimetric and gas chromatographic methods. Geometric mean concentrations of urinary formic acid and methanol in the healthy subjects were 7.82 mg/g creatinine and 1.34 mg/l, respectively. The concentration ratio of formic acid to methanol in the urine of the workers exposed to methanol was calculated to be 3.67 +/- 2.10, which agreed with the ratio under a controlled exposure experiment. A slower excretion of formic acid than that of methanol in the urine of a volunteer was also observed.

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