Spectrophotometric Measurement of Lithium in Human Saliva Using the Chromogenic Reagent Thorin

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17344/acsi.2023.8121

Keywords:

Lithium, saliva, spectrophotometric, Thorin, bipolar, colorimetric

Abstract

The feasibility of using the chromogenic dye Thorin to spectrophotometrically measure lithium concentration in human saliva was explored.  Absorbance wavelength maximum of the Li-Thorin complex was found to be 480 nm.  Absorbance at 480 nm was obtained for saliva calibration standards containing 0.00-5.29 mEq/L of lithium.  A least-squares fit produced a regression equation y = 0.128x + 1.449, R = 0.997. This was used to predict lithium concentrations in both artificially prepared lithium/saliva test solutions and in hospitalized patients treated with lithium. Results agreed well with atomic absorption spectroscopy. Using a reagent blank with an equivalent amount of saliva as the test samples eliminated protein and electrolyte absorbance interference. This study supports the continued exploration of this method as a non-invasive point-of-care testing approach for monitoring saliva lithium in bipolar disorder.

Author Biography

Stephen Robert Levitt, Pain Resource Center, Inc.

Director of Research

Published

11.09.2023

Issue

Section

Analytical chemistry