PMID: 14400446Jul 1, 1960Paper

Determination of magnesium by the Titan yellow and ammonium phosphate methods

Journal of Clinical Pathology
F W HEATON

Abstract

The ammonium phosphate and Titan yellow methods for determining magnesium have been investigated, and improvements to both techniques are presented. The Titan yellow method is shown to be subject to interference which makes it unsuitable for the analysis of blood cells, food, and faecal materials, and may also affect its reliability with pathological samples of serum and urine. The relative insusceptibility to interference of the ammonium phosphate method makes it more reliable than the Titan yellow method with pathological specimens, and slight modifications permit the use of the same basic procedure with blood, urine, and solutions of food or faecal ash.

References

May 1, 1956·Journal of Clinical Pathology·D W NEILL, R A NEELY
Jan 1, 1957·Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation·E ANDREASEN
Oct 1, 1959·The Journal of Clinical Investigation·E S BARKERJ K CLARK
Aug 1, 1957·Journal of Clinical Pathology·D N Baron, J Bell

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Citations

Apr 1, 1964·Clinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry·F W HEATON
Oct 1, 1964·Clinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry·E W RICE, C Z LAPARA
Aug 1, 1966·Clinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry·M A MacDonald, L Watson
Jan 1, 1962·The British Journal of Nutrition·P M ZAREMBSKI, A HODGKINSON
Jun 19, 2012·Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine·Rahul V TakawaleSubhash L Bodhankar
Aug 15, 1969·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·N W Alcock
Sep 12, 2015·Folia Microbiologica·Benedek PappLevente Karaffa
Mar 6, 2018·Neurology India·Milind Sankhe, Omkar Churi
Nov 1, 1963·Klinische Wochenschrift·S HAENZE, W HILLER
Jan 19, 2010·Food and Chemical Toxicology : an International Journal Published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association·Kalyani DivakarGoli Divakar

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