4.6 Article

Urine analysis using FTIR spectroscopy: A study on healthy adults and children

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOPHOTONICS
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/jbio.202100009

Keywords

adult urine; band assignment; children urine; FTIR; normal variation; urine spectrum

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The study of urine spectra from 108 healthy volunteers using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy revealed that young adults exhibit the greatest spectral variations, while children have the least. Older individuals show a higher variance in phosphate excretion. Females consistently exhibit slightly higher citrate content regardless of age.
Urine spectra from 108 healthy volunteers are studied by attenuated total refraction-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. The spectral features are correlated with observable urine components. The variation of spectra within a healthy population is quantified and a library of reference spectra is constructed. Using the band assignments, these spectra are compared with both age-wise and gender-wise. Children show the least intensity variations compared to both adult groups. Young adults show the highest variation, particularly in the 1650 to 1400 cm(-1) and 1200 to 900 cm(-1) regions. These results indicate the importance of the size of the control group in comparative studies utilizing FTIR. Age-wise comparisons reveal that phosphate and sulfate excretion decreases with age, and that the variance of phosphate among individuals is higher with adults. As for gender-wise comparisons, females show a slightly higher citrate content at 1390 cm(-1) regardless of the age and they show a higher variance in the 1200 to 1000 cm(-1) region when compared to men.

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