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. 1978 May;15(3):151-6.
doi: 10.1177/000456327801500131.

Butanol extraction of serum and urinary gamma-glutamyltransferase and its application in clinical diagnosis

Butanol extraction of serum and urinary gamma-glutamyltransferase and its application in clinical diagnosis

P R Beck. Ann Clin Biochem. 1978 May.

Abstract

Gamma-glutamyltransferase (gamma-GT) activity was measured in serum and urine before and after extraction with n-butanol. Residual gamma-GT activity after extraction of normal serum with butanol was more than 75%, whereas for normal urine the figure was less than 68%. The loss of activity from urine was not affected by prior dialysis, and the stabilisation which resulted from adding bovine serum albumin at a concentration of 40 g/l did not approach the residual activity with normal serum. In patients with a variety of renal diseases, residual gamma-GT activity in the urine after butanol extraction was inversely correlated with the creatinine clearance. Butanol extraction was performed on serum samples from 182 patients with a variety of diseases. Eighty-one per cent of patients with elevated gamma-GT activities caused by hepatobiliary disease had an increased loss of activity after butanol extraction. By contrast, only 34% of patients with increases gamma-GT activities in whom there was no clinical or other biochemical evidence of hepatic disease, had increased loss of gamma-GT activity after butanol. The reasons for differences between urinary and serum gamma-GT in response to butanol, and the implications in interpreting serum gamma-GT activities are discussed.

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