long carbon chain fatty acids
Fatty acids in the blood are mainly formed by esterification. About 45% of them are glycerol, 15% and CH, 35% with PL synthetic esters, and only 5% of fatty acids are in a free state, mainly long-chain fatty acids. Normal value of long carbon chain fatty acids: gas chromatography-mass spectrometry: 0.014% of total fatty acids. Basic Information Specialist classification: growth and development check classification: biochemical examination Applicable gender: whether men and women apply fasting: fasting Tips: If the serum free fatty acid concentration is greater than 2mmol / L, it can be diluted after appropriate dilution. Normal value Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry accounted for 0.014% of total fatty acids. Clinical significance Elevation: Adrenal leukodystrophy (ALD). High results may be diseases: protein-energy malnutrition considerations If the serum free fatty acid concentration is greater than 2mmol / L, it can be diluted after appropriate dilution. Inspection process 1. Mixing reagents: (1) Reagent I: buffer solution I4.0ml, ATP2.0ml, MgCl22.0ml, coenzyme A2.0ml, TritonX-1004.0ml, acyl-CoA synthetase 2.0ml, plus double distilled water 4.5ml (20.5ml total) . (2) Reagent II: 10.0 ml of MES buffer, 6.0 ml of 4-aminoantipyrine, TBHB 8.0 ml, 2.0 ml of NaN3 solution, Triton X-1004.0 ml, peroxidase solution 0.4 ml, double distilled water 10.0 ml (Total 40.4ml). (3) Reagent III: 2.1 ml of NEM buffer and 2.0 ml of acyl-CoA oxidase (4.1 ml in total). The above three mixed reagents can be stable for 3 days at 4 ° C in the dark. 2. Add 1 ml of reagent and 2 ml of reagent II to each tube and mix at 37 ° C for 10 min. 3. Add 50 μl of blank and serum samples, mix at 37 ° C for 5 min, and measure the absorbance at 546 nm to A1. 4. Add 0.20 ml of reagent III and mix. After the reaction is stopped for 20-25 minutes, the absorbance is measured at 546 nm to be A2. Not suitable for the crowd no. Adverse reactions and risks no.
The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.