Publication | Closed Access
High Incidence of Significant Urinary Ascorbic Acid Concentrations in a West Coast Population—Implications for Routine Urinalysis
81
Citations
6
References
1992
Year
Urological ResearchUrologyWest Coast Population—implicationsMedicineBioanalysisForensic ToxicologyLaboratory MedicineVitamin CUrine SamplesHigh IncidenceClinical ChemistryDipstick TestingChronic Kidney DiseaseNephrologyChromatographyRoutine Urinalysis
Examination of 4379 routine urinalysis specimens with dipsticks sensitive to ascorbic acid showed that 22.8% were positive specimens. The mean urinary vitamin C concentration in this population was 2120 mumol/L. There was a high rate of false-negative dipstick results for hemoglobin in patients with vitamin C in the urine. The highest false-negative rates were observed in urine samples containing less than 50 erythrocytes per high-power field. In further experiments when volunteers consumed supplemental oral USP vitamin C at doses of 100, 250, 500, and 1000 mg or vitamin C-containing fruit juices, even the lowest doses of oral vitamin C or juice resulted in sufficient urinary vitamin C to produce false-negative dipstick results in hemoglobin and glucose testing. To prevent potentially dangerous false-negative results, screening urinalysis protocols relying only on dipstick testing should include a check for urinary vitamin C or use a dipstick that is not subject to vitamin C interference.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1989 | 134 | |
1985 | 92 | |
1980 | 38 | |
1975 | 24 | |
1987 | 21 | |
1986 | 18 |
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