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Assay and identification of histamine in human gastric aspirate by a fluorometric-fluoroenzymatic technique. Its application in patients with chronic duodenal ulcer

  • Histamine and Kinins
  • Determination of Histamine and Its Metabolites
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Abstract

Histamine assays can be unreliable in individual subjects or samples even though the particular method is in general working very well. Therefore the specificity and accuracy of histamine determination in the gastric aspirate of individual duodenal ulcer patients was thoroughly examined and shown to be satisfactory.

Pitfalls of the fluorometric assay were investigated. A native (non-histamine) fluorescence in gastric aspirate which occurs before the addition of OPT was not removed by the original Shore procedure. In the combined assay (Dowex 50+ butanol extraction) this fluorescence no longer interferes with the assay.

For the identification of histamine in a single gastric aspirate of an individual duodenal ulcer patient, the reversed blank (3M HCl added to the reaction mixture before OPT instead after OPT), excitation and fluorescence spectra, the heating test with spectra recorded and the HMT test were found to be reliable. The formaldehyde test and the heating test without recording the spectra were useless since they gave false negative results. Since the HMT test was regarded as a reference method it was thoroughly investigated both by theoretical considerations (enzyme kinetics) and by a series of measurements in a single patient as well as in a group of nine subjects.

Samples from the period of peak acid output in response to pentagastrin showed an average histamine concentration of about 8 ng/ml and a histamine output of 1.5 μg/30 min.

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Supported by*The Wellcome Trust, London, and**the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Lo 199/9).

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Parkin, J.V., Lorenz, W., Barth, H. et al. Assay and identification of histamine in human gastric aspirate by a fluorometric-fluoroenzymatic technique. Its application in patients with chronic duodenal ulcer. Agents and Actions 12, 17–25 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01965100

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