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Blood Biochemistry Overview and Tests

This document discusses various blood tests used to evaluate liver, renal, and cardiac function as well as diabetes. Key tests mentioned include albumin and bilirubin for liver function; BUN and creatinine for renal function; CK, CK-MB, and troponin levels for detecting cardiac injury; and glucose and HbA1c levels for diabetes screening and management. The document provides details on the clinical significance and interpretation of abnormal results for these common biochemical tests.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views25 pages

Blood Biochemistry Overview and Tests

This document discusses various blood tests used to evaluate liver, renal, and cardiac function as well as diabetes. Key tests mentioned include albumin and bilirubin for liver function; BUN and creatinine for renal function; CK, CK-MB, and troponin levels for detecting cardiac injury; and glucose and HbA1c levels for diabetes screening and management. The document provides details on the clinical significance and interpretation of abnormal results for these common biochemical tests.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

BLOOD BIOCHEMISTRY

• Liver function
• Renal function
• Cardiac enzymes
• Diabetic test
LIVER FUNCTION

• Albumin, bilirubin, PT
• AST, ALT, ALP, rGT
ALBUMIN

• Produced by the liver and contributes approximately 80% of serum


colloid osmotic pressure
• Lost directly from the blood because of hemorrhage, burn, or
exudates, or it may be lost into the urine or stool because of
nephrotic syndrome and chronic diarrhea
BILIRUBIN

• Breakdown product of Hb
• Exceeds 0.2-0.4 mg/dL, bilirubin will begin to appear in the urine
• Conjugated bilirubin: water soluble, measured as D-bil
• Unconjugated bilirubin: water insoluble, bound to serum albumin,
measured as T-bil – D-bil
BILIRUBIN

• Increased direct (conjugated): hepatocelluar injury,


biliary obstruction/cholestasis (gallstone, tumor,
stricture, drug-induced)
• Increased indirect (unconjugated): so-called “hemolytic
jaundice” caused by any type of the hemolytic anemia,
newborn jaundice
ASPARTATE AMINOTRANSFERASE

• Abundant in heart and liver tissue and moderately present in


skeletal muscle, the kidney, and the pancreas
• Evaluate myocardial injury and to diagnose and assess the prognosis
of liver disease resulting from hepatocellular injury
• Higher than that of ALT in cirrhosis
ALANINE AMINOTRANSFERASE

• Relatively more abundant in hepatic tissue, more liver-specific


enzyme
• ALT>AST in viral hepatitis, AST >ALT in alcohol hepatitis
ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE

• Different physiochemical properties and originate from different


tissues: liver, bone, placenta, intestine
• The presence of early bile duct abnormalities can result in ALP
before bilirubin are observed.
ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE

• Drug induced cholestatic jaundice (eg., chlorpromazine or


sulfonamides) can ALP.
• ALP is an excellent indicator of space-occupying lesions in liver
because of disruption of biliary canaliculi within liver.
-GLUTAMYL TRANSFERASE

• Major clinical value for hepatobiliary disease.


• GT is a sensitive indicator of recent alcohol exposure
(GT/ALP>1.4).
• More responsive to biliary obstruction (5-50 times of upper limit of
normal)
• Useful in the diagnosis of obstructive jaundice, intrahepatic
cholestasis
RENAL FUNCTION

• BUN
• Creatinine
BLOOD UREA NITROGEN

• End-product of protein metabolism


• Azotemia (elevation of BUN)
– Dehydration
– Blood loss
– Steroid
– Renal failure
– Heart failure
CREATININE

• Derived from creatine and phosphocreatine, major constituent of


muscle
• Ccr reflects the glomerular filtration rate (GFR)

(140  age) (body wt in kg)


Clcr ( ml / min)  for males
( SrCr )( 72)
If for females  0.85
CREATININE

• BUN : Cr ratio
– BUN/Cr >20 in prerenal and postrenal azotemia
– BUN/Cr <12 in acute tubular acidosis
– BUN/Cr between 12 and 20 in intrinsic renal disease
CARDIAC ENZYMES
CKtotal

CK-MB

SGOT LDH
total

LDH-1
CREATINE KINASE

• Suspected MI or muscle disease, heart, skeletal muscle, and brain


with high levels.
• Total CK can be increase by strenuous exercise, IM injections of
drugs that are irritating to tissue (eg., diazepam, phenytoin), acute
psychotic episodes or myocardial injury.
CREATINE KINASE

• CK-MB: increased in acute MI , pericarditis with myocarditis,


rhabdomyolysis, crush injury, Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy,
polymyositis, malignant hyperthermia, and cardiac surgery

• CK-MB level >25 U/L usually are associated with a MI, the absolute
amount may vary depending on the assay technique used.
TROPONIN-I

• The detection of the presence of troponin T and I is


more specific and sensitive indicator of myocardial
damage.
• Troponin  within 4hrs of AMI, enabling clinicians to
initiate appropriate therapy very quickly following
presentation to the ED.
DIABETIC TEST

• Glucose
• HbA1c
GLUCOSE FASTING/ POST PRANDIAL

• The fasting plasma glucose and 2hrs post-prandial glucose tests


commonly are used for evaluating glucose homeostasis.
• Diagnosis of DM:
– Fasting blood glucose>126 mg/dL
– Symptoms of diabetes plus a random plasma glucose  200
mg/dL
– Plasma glucose  200 mg/dL at 2hrs following a 75g glucose load
HBA1C

• Measurement of HbA1C (normal range 4.6-6.5% ) indicative of


glucose control during the preceding 2-3 months.
NORMAL VALUES

• Abnormal laboratory values are not always of diagnostic


significance and normal values sometimes can be interpreted as
being abnormal in some disease.
• Various factors (eg., age, gender, weight, height, time since last
meal, drugs) can affect the range of normal values for a given
test.
• Each laboratory has its own set of normal value.
LABORATORY ERROR
• Spoiled specimen
• Specimen taken at wrong time
• Incomplete specimen
• Faulty reagents
• Technical errors
• Diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
• Diet
• Medication

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