Estimation of Plasma Phosphatase by Determination of Hydrolysed Phenol with Amino-antipyrine

P R Kind(London Postgraduate Medical and Dental Education), E. J. King(London Postgraduate Medical and Dental Education)
Journal of Clinical Pathology
November 1, 1954
Cited by 1,643Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Plasma phosphatase was first determined by Martland (1925) and then by Kay (1930), using glycerophosphate and estimating the inorganic phosphate liberated at 370 C. at a specified pH and in a given time. The procedure has been variously modified and simplified by Jenner and Kay (1932), Bodansky (1933), Shinowara, Jones, and Reinhart (1942). Several substrates, other than glycero- phosphate, have also been used, e.g., phenyl phos- phate (with determination of either the liberated phenol, King and Armstrong, 1934, or phosphate, King, Abul-Fadl, and Walker, 1951), nitro-phenyl phosphate (by the colour of the liberated nitro- phenol, Ohmori, 1937; King and Delory, 1939; Bessey, Lowry, and Brock, 1946), naphthyl phos- phate (by determination of naphthol by a diazo method, Seligman, Chauncey, Nachlas, Manheimer, and Ravin, 1951), phenolphthalein phosphate (by the colour of alkaline phenolphthalein, Bray and King, 1943; Huggins and Talalay, 1945). Of the.se procedures, the Bodansky (glycerophosphate) and the King-Armstrong (phenyl phosphate) are perhaps the most widely used.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis