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I have a large number of serum and 24 hour urine samples from a collection of individuals on many consecutive days. Some of the samples contain a 'large' amount of a substance that has a brown color. The concentration is large in the sense that there is a visible discolouration in those samples. I want to identify the most abundant molecules that are causing the discolouration with some degree of accuracy.

Is it possible to analyse by chemistry methods?

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    $\begingroup$ I’m voting to close this question because it doesn't appear to be about Biology as defined in the help center. This seems like it would be a much better fit in either Chemistry or possibly Medical Sciences. However, please do not crosspost, instead either request migration or delete from this site before reposting. $\endgroup$
    – tyersome
    Sep 22, 2021 at 17:52
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    $\begingroup$ Of course it is! $\endgroup$ Oct 22, 2021 at 14:52

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Dipstick urinalysis?

dipstick

source

The urine dipstick has a bunch of squares, each with a chemical analysis ready to go. The dip will semiquantitatively show you what is in the urine. My bet would be hemoglobin but various urine dipsticks will have various substances on there. A dipstick will detect hemoglobin which will come out of any blood cells once they lyse on sitting in storage for a while. Free hemoglobin can be in fresh urine too if a person is hemolyzing. Another brown thing could be bilirubin. All detectable with chemistry.

A serum chemistry lab will quantify many different things in serum - again bilirubin would be my bet as a common component of serum. You can look for almost anything and a clinical lab can run a chemistry test to determine presence or quantity of that thing.

Chemistry tests could miss nonchemical microscopic brown things. Bacteria or mold could contaminate your specimens, or there might still be red blood cells present. You could look for these things under a microscope.

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