It's method of determining the inorganic phosphate content in urine or blood, etc. It is a colorimetric assay.
The Fiske-subbaRow procedure is a method used in biochemistry to determine the protein concentration in a sample based on colorimetric analysis. It involves reacting protein samples with a reagent containing copper ions, forming a colored complex that can be measured spectrophotometrically to estimate protein concentration. The method is named after the scientists who developed it: Oliver H. Lowry, Nathan J. Rosebrough, Lewis A. Farr, and Rose E. Randall.
The Fiske-Subbarow method is a colorimetric assay based on the formation of a blue-colored complex between inorganic phosphate and molybdate. In this method, the reaction between phosphate and ammonium molybdate in an acidic environment leads to the formation of a phosphomolybdate complex, which can be measured spectrophotometrically at a specific wavelength. The intensity of the blue color is directly proportional to the concentration of inorganic phosphate in the sample, allowing for its quantification.
Clinton Fiske Stanley has written: 'Stanley's Western forms' -- subject(s): Civil procedure, Forms
Fiske Goodeve Fiske-Harrison was born in 1793.
Fiske Goodeve Fiske-Harrison died in 1872.
Albert Augustus Fiske has written: 'The Fiske family'
Dwight Fiske died in 1959.
George Fiske was born in 1835.
George Fiske died in 1918.
Fiske Kimball died in 1955.
Fiske Kimball was born in 1888.
Solveig Fiske was born in 1952.