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

23 February 2023, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

This study explored the feasibility of using the chromogenic dye Thorin to spectrophotometrically measure the lithium concentration in human saliva. The absorbance wavelength maximum of the Li-Thorin complex was determined to be 480 nm. Lithium concentrations were measured spectrophotometrically at 480 nm in human pooled saliva with lithium added to produce calibration standards of 0.00-5.29 mEq/L of lithium, which corresponds to a blood lithium range of 0.00-2.60 mEq/L, assuming a saliva/blood ratio of 2/1. A least-squares fit of the absorbance vs lithium concentration calibration data produced a regression equation y = 0.128x + 1.449 with correlation coefficient = 0.997. This regression equation was then used to predict lithium concentrations from absorbance data in prepared lithium/saliva test solutions and in hospitalized patients being treated with lithium. The results generally agreed well with those determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy. By measuring absorbance of test saliva vs reagent blank containing the same amount of saliva, interfering effects of saliva protein and electrolytes in the test samples were avoided. This study supports the continued exploration of this method as a non-invasive point-of-care testing approach for monitoring saliva lithium during lithium treatment.

Keywords

Lithium
Saliva
Thorin
Thoron
Spectrophotometric
Spectroscopy
Colorimetric
bipolar
manic depressive
chromogen
point-of-care

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Supplementary Data
Description
Infrared absorbance measurements plotted in Figures 1, 2 and 4 and Safety and Precautions for use of the chemical reagent Thorin (C16H11AsN2O10S2). Minor editing.
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