Abstract

Introduction and objective: The determination of homocysteine plasma levels has been reported as a risk marker of interest in severe diseases involving endothelial injury and associated with the development or progression of atherosclerotic lesions and thrombus formation. The aims of this study were to validate method for quantification of plasma homocysteine by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorimetric detection, and to compare the results obtained from patients with pulmonary hypertension by HPLC with those obtained by spectrophotometric enzymatic cycling (S-Ec) method. Materials and methods: The validation parameters, such as linearity, matrix effect, precision, accuracy, detection and quantitation limits, and robustness of the method were evaluated aiming to demonstrate that it is suitable for the intended use. The data obtained in the quantification of homocysteine using the validated method (HPLC) and the spectrophotometric enzymatic cycling (S-Ec) method, were compared. Results: The method was precise, accurate, and robust; it also had good recovery and showed no matrix effect. The linearity covered a range of 5.0-85.0 µmol/l and the limits of detection and quantification were 1.0 µmol/l and 3.4 µmol/l, respectively. The results obtained for homocysteine determination by HPLC and S-Ec methods were comparable. Conclusion: The validated HPLC method showed good performance for quantification of plasma homocysteine levels, while S-Ec method provided results for homocysteine comparable with those obtained by the validated method; therefore, this methodology is a potential alternative of automated method for clinical laboratories.

Highlights

  • Introduction and objectiveThe determination of homocysteine plasma levels has been reported as a risk marker of interest in severe diseases involving endothelial injury and associated with the development or progression of atherosclerotic lesions and thrombus formation

  • Published research hypothesized that increased plasma homocysteine levels favors the occurrence of diseases, such as acute myocardial infarction, thrombosis, and atherosclerosis disease[11, 12, 16, 17]

  • The evaluation of plasma homocysteine levels has been reported as a biomarker for endothelial dysfunction, linking its increase to severe diseases with endothelial injury, such as pulmonary hypertension (PH)(3), First submission on 03/08/14; last submission on 13/11/14; accepted for publication on 13/11/14; published on 20/12/14 1

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Introduction and objectiveThe determination of homocysteine plasma levels has been reported as a risk marker of interest in severe diseases involving endothelial injury and associated with the development or progression of atherosclerotic lesions and thrombus formation. The aims of this study were to validate method for quantification of plasma homocysteine by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorimetric detection, and to compare the results obtained from patients with pulmonary hypertension by HPLC with those obtained by spectrophotometric enzymatic cycling (S-Ec) method. Conclusion: The validated HPLC method showed good performance for quantification of plasma homocysteine levels, while S-Ec method provided results for homocysteine comparable with those obtained by the validated method; this methodology is a potential alternative of automated method for clinical laboratories. The evaluation of plasma homocysteine levels has been reported as a biomarker for endothelial dysfunction, linking its increase to severe diseases with endothelial injury, such as pulmonary hypertension (PH)(3), First submission on 03/08/14; last submission on 13/11/14; accepted for publication on 13/11/14; published on 20/12/14 1. PhD in Pharmaceutical Sciences by UFMG; research and development coordinator of Labtest Diagnóstica S.A. group

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call