The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects

The blood thiamine concentration of 11 subjects was determined by means of the Friedemann and Kmieciak (1943) method every 5 days during a 30-day experimental period. Study I was conducted on 5 students in 1947 and Study II was conducted on 6 students in 1948. The subjects in both studies were on di...

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Main Author: Cox, Elizabeth Willard
Other Authors: Storvick, Clara A.
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1957/28287
id ndltd-ORGSU-oai-ir.library.oregonstate.edu-1957-28287
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Vitamin B1
Blood -- Analysis
Nutrition
spellingShingle Vitamin B1
Blood -- Analysis
Nutrition
Cox, Elizabeth Willard
The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
description The blood thiamine concentration of 11 subjects was determined by means of the Friedemann and Kmieciak (1943) method every 5 days during a 30-day experimental period. Study I was conducted on 5 students in 1947 and Study II was conducted on 6 students in 1948. The subjects in both studies were on diets in which their intake of ascorbic acid only was controlled. A record was kept of each subjects food intake. The daily values for total Calories, non-fat Calories and thiamine in the diet were obtained from food tables. Non-fat Calories, the ratio of non-tat Calories to total Calories, thiamine to 1000 Calories and thiamine to non-fat Calories were calculated. The blood thiamine values for the subjects in Study I (all girls) ranged from 4.91 to 10.85 mcg per cent. There was a general decrease throughout the study in the mean intake of thiamine expressed in terms of mcg per 1000 Calories and mcg per 1000 non-fat Calories. The greater the decrease in thiamine intake in terms of mcg per 1000 non-fat Calories the greater was the loss of blood thiamine. The values for thiamine in the blood of the boys in Study II ranged from 8.00 to 15.32 mcg per cent and for the one girl in Study II from 8.35 to 13.93 mcg per cent. The blood thiamine values for the subjects in Study II did not indicate the same relationship to thiamine intake as did those in Study I. There was an increase in the concentration of the thiamine in the blood even though there was a decrease in the mean thiamine intake from the beginning to the end of the experiment. It would appear, therefore, that the boys obtained sufficient thiamine throughout the 30-day period. No data have been obtained which indicate whether or not there are variations from day to day in the concentration of thiamine in the blood when subjects are maintained on a constant intake of thiamine. A metabolism study using 5 adult women as subjects was planned in order to determine the daily values for thiamine in the blood when subjects were maintained on a controlled diet for a period of 52 days. An unpublished micro-method for the determination of thiamine in the blood developed by Dr. H. Burch (1948) was to be used. The experimental diet consisted of a basal diet providing approximately 1000 Calories and 300 mcg of thiamine with additions to the basal diet planned in units providing approximately 500 Calories and 150 mcg of thiamine. The values for protein, fat, carbohydrate and total Calories were obtained, from food tables. Non-fat Calories were calculated and the thiamine content of the food was determined by analysis. All 5 subjects ate the same food each day. In spite of the fact that considerable preliminary work was performed before the study started the blood thiamine values obtained in the nutrition laboratory were always significantly lower than results obtained by other workers. It was decided to freeze the blood samples after the protein had been removed and work on certain aspects of the method before any analyses of the blood thiamine were made. Further study of the Burch method included variation in the amounts of potassium acetate used, use of different trichloroacetic acid reagents, tests for enzyme activity, variations in the incubation procedure, variations in the procedure for the oxidation to thiochrome and in the extraction of thiochrome, reading samples sooner after transfer to optically matched tubes, variations in the irradiation procedure, use of all new reagents, use of another micro-photofluorometer, development of standard curves and the determination of the response of two subjects to an oral test dose of thiamine hydrochloride. None of these variations resulted in a solution of the problem. Suggestions for future work with the Burch method are discussed. === Graduation date: 1950
author2 Storvick, Clara A.
author_facet Storvick, Clara A.
Cox, Elizabeth Willard
author Cox, Elizabeth Willard
author_sort Cox, Elizabeth Willard
title The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
title_short The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
title_full The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
title_fullStr The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
title_full_unstemmed The determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
title_sort determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjects
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1957/28287
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spelling ndltd-ORGSU-oai-ir.library.oregonstate.edu-1957-282872012-07-03T14:36:41ZThe determination of thiamine in the blood of human subjectsCox, Elizabeth WillardVitamin B1Blood -- AnalysisNutritionThe blood thiamine concentration of 11 subjects was determined by means of the Friedemann and Kmieciak (1943) method every 5 days during a 30-day experimental period. Study I was conducted on 5 students in 1947 and Study II was conducted on 6 students in 1948. The subjects in both studies were on diets in which their intake of ascorbic acid only was controlled. A record was kept of each subjects food intake. The daily values for total Calories, non-fat Calories and thiamine in the diet were obtained from food tables. Non-fat Calories, the ratio of non-tat Calories to total Calories, thiamine to 1000 Calories and thiamine to non-fat Calories were calculated. The blood thiamine values for the subjects in Study I (all girls) ranged from 4.91 to 10.85 mcg per cent. There was a general decrease throughout the study in the mean intake of thiamine expressed in terms of mcg per 1000 Calories and mcg per 1000 non-fat Calories. The greater the decrease in thiamine intake in terms of mcg per 1000 non-fat Calories the greater was the loss of blood thiamine. The values for thiamine in the blood of the boys in Study II ranged from 8.00 to 15.32 mcg per cent and for the one girl in Study II from 8.35 to 13.93 mcg per cent. The blood thiamine values for the subjects in Study II did not indicate the same relationship to thiamine intake as did those in Study I. There was an increase in the concentration of the thiamine in the blood even though there was a decrease in the mean thiamine intake from the beginning to the end of the experiment. It would appear, therefore, that the boys obtained sufficient thiamine throughout the 30-day period. No data have been obtained which indicate whether or not there are variations from day to day in the concentration of thiamine in the blood when subjects are maintained on a constant intake of thiamine. A metabolism study using 5 adult women as subjects was planned in order to determine the daily values for thiamine in the blood when subjects were maintained on a controlled diet for a period of 52 days. An unpublished micro-method for the determination of thiamine in the blood developed by Dr. H. Burch (1948) was to be used. The experimental diet consisted of a basal diet providing approximately 1000 Calories and 300 mcg of thiamine with additions to the basal diet planned in units providing approximately 500 Calories and 150 mcg of thiamine. The values for protein, fat, carbohydrate and total Calories were obtained, from food tables. Non-fat Calories were calculated and the thiamine content of the food was determined by analysis. All 5 subjects ate the same food each day. In spite of the fact that considerable preliminary work was performed before the study started the blood thiamine values obtained in the nutrition laboratory were always significantly lower than results obtained by other workers. It was decided to freeze the blood samples after the protein had been removed and work on certain aspects of the method before any analyses of the blood thiamine were made. Further study of the Burch method included variation in the amounts of potassium acetate used, use of different trichloroacetic acid reagents, tests for enzyme activity, variations in the incubation procedure, variations in the procedure for the oxidation to thiochrome and in the extraction of thiochrome, reading samples sooner after transfer to optically matched tubes, variations in the irradiation procedure, use of all new reagents, use of another micro-photofluorometer, development of standard curves and the determination of the response of two subjects to an oral test dose of thiamine hydrochloride. None of these variations resulted in a solution of the problem. Suggestions for future work with the Burch method are discussed.Graduation date: 1950Storvick, Clara A.2012-03-19T20:02:56Z2012-03-19T20:02:56Z1949-08-121949-08-12Thesis/Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1957/28287en_US