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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Validation of blood vitamin A concentrations in cattle: comparison of a new cow-side test (iCheck™ FLUORO) with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).

Journal:
BMC veterinary research
Year:
2017
Authors:
Raila, Jens et al.
Affiliation:
Institute of Nutritional Science · Germany

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Plasma concentration of retinol is an accepted indicator to assess the vitamin A (retinol) status in cattle. However, the determination of vitamin A requires a time consuming multi-step procedure, which needs specific equipment to perform extraction, centrifugation or saponification prior to high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). METHODS: The concentrations of retinol in whole blood (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;10), plasma (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;132) and serum (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;61) were measured by a new rapid cow-side test (iCheck&#x2122; FLUORO) and compared with those by HPLC in two independent laboratories in Germany (DE) and Japan (JP). RESULTS: Retinol concentrations in plasma ranged from 0.033 to 0.532&#xa0;mg/L, and in serum from 0.043 to 0.360&#xa0;mg/L (HPLC method). No significant differences in retinol levels were observed between the new rapid cow-side test and HPLC performed in different laboratories (HPLC vs. iCheck&#x2122; FLUORO: 0.320&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.047&#xa0;mg/L vs. 0.333&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.044&#xa0;mg/L, and 0.240&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.096&#xa0;mg/L vs. 0.241&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.069&#xa0;mg/L, lab DE and lab JP, respectively). A similar comparability was observed when whole blood was used (HPLC vs. iCheck&#x2122; FLUORO: 0.353&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.084&#xa0;mg/L vs. 0.341&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.064&#xa0;mg/L). Results showed a good agreement between both methods based on correlation coefficients of r&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.87 (P&#xa0;<&#xa0;0.001) and Bland-Altman blots revealed no significant bias for all comparison. CONCLUSIONS: With the new rapid cow-side test (iCheck&#x2122; FLUORO) retinol concentrations in cattle can be reliably assessed within a few minutes and directly in the barn using even whole blood without the necessity of prior centrifugation. The ease of the application of the new rapid cow-side test and its portability can improve the diagnostic of vitamin A status and will help to control vitamin A supplementation in specific vitamin A feeding regimes such as used to optimize health status in calves or meat marbling in Japanese Black cattle.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28486960/