A 2 years 9 month-old-boy who ingested model aviation fuel was found to have an elevated serum creatinine concentration of 0.53 mmol/L (normal range 0.02-0.05 mmol/L) by the Jaffe (alkaline picrate) reaction. However, when the creatinine concentration was measured using a specific enzymatic assay, it was within the normal range. It was shown that nitromethane, a constituent of aviation fuel, interferes with the Jaffe reaction, leading to a falsely elevated creatinine reading. This phenomenon has been reported only once previously and, despite its potential clinical importance, nitromethane does not appear in published lists of substances that interfere with the Jaffe reaction.