Publications by authors named "D H Henton"

Two methods for the determination of plasma vitamin E--high-pressure liquid chromatography and spectrophotofluorometry--were compared on samples from four groups of pediatric patients: children and infants receiving lipid emulsion as part of their parenteral nutrition regimen, neonates receiving parenteral nutrition who were not receiving lipid emulsion at the time of blood sampling, and short admission surgery control subjects. In control subjects and patients not receiving lipid emulsions, both methods yielded similar results for vitamin E as alpha-tocopherol. In contrast, in patients receiving lipid emulsion, the fluorometric method yielded values ranging from 200% to 300% greater than did high-pressure liquid chromatography.

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This study compares total and direct-reacting bilirubin values in 40 serum samples from patients with various diagnoses, as measured by automated methods (Beckman Synchron CX-5, Beckman Astra 8, Kodak Ektachem 700) and HPLC and by a manual method for delta bilirubin. For total bilirubin, within-run CVs were less than 6%. The Ektachem 700 method underestimated bilirubin with serum samples from patients with Crigler-Najjar syndrome and from newborns in whom unconjugated bilirubin concentrations were increased but conjugated bilirubins were not present or were present only in small amounts.

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The loss of vitamin A to plastic infusion tubing from a total parenteral nutrition solution was studied using an in vitro infusion system and HPLC quantification of vitamin A. Polyolefin tubing was compared to polyvinyl chloride at varied vitamin A concentration, infusion temperature, and flow rate. Significantly enhanced recovery of vitamin A was found with the polyolefin tubing compared to that of the polyvinyl chloride under all conditions tested.

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Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in children is associated with the complicating syndromes of cholestasis and cholelithiasis. The causes of these syndromes are not completely clear. Gastrointestinal hypomotility associated with enteral fasting may be involved in the pathogenesis of both syndromes.

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