Uric Acid a Normal Constituent of Blood

Up till quite recently it was held that in normal persons the amount of uric acid in the blood was too small to be detected; also that uric acid was not demonstrable in the blood of normal individuals when on a purin-free diet. On the other hand, if the subject’s blood was found to contain uric acid, while on a purin-free diet, it was held a characteristic feature of gout and of prime diagnostic import.

But, since the introduction of Folin and Denis’s method, it has been established that uric acid is constantly present, in demonstrable amounts, in human blood. These authorities, using their colorimetric method, found that the uric acid content of the blood ranged from 0·7-3·7 mg. per 100 grams. They believe that 1-2 mg. of uric acid per 100 grams of blood is well within the normal variations, but “are not prepared to say that they represent the full variations.”

However, before applying their colorimetric method to human subjects, Folin and Denis conducted some researches into the uric acid blood content of a variety of animals, the results of which appear in the following table:—

Uric Acid, Total Non-Protein Nitrogen and Urea Nitrogen in Blood

(The Figures represent Milligrams per 100 grams of Blood.)

Uric
acid.
Non-protein
nitrogen.
Urea
nitrogen.
Rabbit (6 cases)0·053113
Sheep (mixed blood)0·052813
Pig (mixed blood)0·053214
Horse (1 case, anti-toxin animal)0·055428
Monkey (1 case, poliomyelitis)0·056038
Beef (mixed blood)0·22414
Cat (2 cases, diet, liver)0·26034
Cat (2 cases, diet, milk and eggs)0·26737
Cat (2 cases, diet, rice and cream)0·23120
Chicken (6 cases, mixed blood)4·9328
Duck (4 cases, mixed blood)4·8347
Goose (1 case)4·8268

The most striking feature of these findings is the marked contrast between the uric acid blood content of mammals as opposed to avians. In the former the amount is minimal—0·2 mg. or less per 100 grams of blood. On the other hand, in the blood of birds, in whose instance the origin of uric acid is so different, it is present in relatively large amounts. As Folin and Denis observe, the small amounts of urea in the blood of birds, as compared with that of mammals, is also worthy of note.

Reverting now to the findings in human subjects, as observed by Folin and Denis, these have been summarised as follows by Walker Hall:—