posted on 2016-07-26, 00:00authored byA. Daniel McCartt, Ted J. Ognibene, Graham Bench, Kenneth
W. Turteltaub
A cavity
ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) instrument was developed
using mature, robust hardware for the measurement of carbon-14 in
biological studies. The system was characterized using carbon-14 elevated
glucose samples and returned a linear response up to 387 times contemporary
carbon-14 concentrations. Carbon-14 free and contemporary carbon-14
samples with varying carbon-13 concentrations were used to assess
the method detection limit of approximately one-third contemporary
carbon-14 levels. Sources of inaccuracies are presented and discussed,
and the capability to measure carbon-14 in biological samples is demonstrated
by comparing pharmacokinetics from carbon-14 dosed guinea pigs analyzed
by both CRDS and accelerator mass spectrometry. The CRDS approach
presented affords easy access to powerful carbon-14 tracer techniques
that can characterize complex biochemical systems.