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We have developed a sensitive gas-chromatographic method for the determination of methylmalonic acid and other short chain dircarboxylic acids in biological samples. The method is based on the isolation of the short chain dicarboxylic acid fraction by Dowex 3 X 4 column chromatography followed by gas-chromatography analysis of these acids as methyl esters. 2-n-Pentyl-malonic acid is used as an internal standard. With this method, methylmalonic, succinic and methylsuccinic acids were consistently detected and accurately measured in urine and serum from normal subjects; the identity of these acids being verified by mass spectroscopy. The method's sensitivity permitted its used in the prenatal diagnosis of methylmalonic acidemia by measuring methylmalonic acid in urine and amniotic fluid from three pregnant heterozygous women at risk. One affected (vitamin B-12 responsive type) and two unaffected fetuses were correctly diagnosed prenatally as judged by postnatal investigations. The amount of methylmalonic acid in urine and amniotic fluid was distinctly increased (2 to 14 times normal) in the former and consistently normal in the latter two cases during the third trimester of pregnancy. Effect of prenatal therapy with large doses of vitamin B-12 was closely followed in the first case using analyses of multiple maternal urine specimens. Urinary methylsuccinic acid excretion was studied in two cases with isovaleric acidemia. It was normal in a sample from a patient in remission but was increased seven fold over control during an episode of ketoacidosis.
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