Organ Function Test
Organ Function Test
Organ Function Test
Normal: 0 to 70 units/L
The enzyme GGT is found in the kidney, liver, and pancreas
To evaluate of hepatobiliary disease.
Increased ALP in the presence of a normal GGT is more suggestive of
muscular or bone-related issues.
As GGT is a hepatic microsomal enzyme, tissue concentrations increase in
response to microsomal enzyme induction by alcohol and other drugs (e.g.,
carbamazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin).
As a result, GGT is a sensitive indicator of recent or chronic alcohol
exposure.
Bilirubin
Normal
Total Bilirubin: 0.1 to 1.0 mg/dL
ENDOCRINE TESTS
Glucose
Normal: 70–110 mg/dL
Hypoglycemia
5 Causes
Too much insulin
Not enough food
Increased physical activity
Illness
Injury
Early signs: Headache, Hunger, Mild agitation
Blood sugar below 50-70 mg/dL
Hallucinations or nervousness or outright hostility
Cold sweat and tachycardia common but not required
Blood sugar below 20 - 50 mg/dL
Convulsions and loss of consciousness
As sugar drops the convulsions stop but coma persists
Hyperglycemic Syndromes
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)
Hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state (HHS)
Manifestations – dehydration, polyuria/
polydipsia, altered mental status, nausea, emesis, abdominal pain
Drugs that Affect Blood Glucose
Beta blockers:
Decrease glycogenolysis & gluconeogenesis
Increase or impair insulin secretion
Also mask hypoglycemic symptoms
Phenytoin: suppress insulin secretion
Diuretics: cause hyperglycemia
Estrogen: contraceptives cause 43-61% increase; Progestron only – no
effect
Glucose – lab assessment
Initial diagnosis and short-term monitoring
Fasting BG
Long-term monitoring
Glycosylated hemoglobin (A )
1C
Fructosamine
Fasting Plasma Glucose (FPG):
Normal: 80 – 110 mg/dl
Prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose)
110 < FPG < 126 mg/dl
Diagnosis of DM:
FPG > 126 mg/dl (at two occasions)
FPG done after 8 hrs of fasting (before BF)
ADA recommend Q3 years screening (>30 yrs of age if have risk
factors)
Oral Glucose Tolerance (OGTT)
Normal:
< 140 mg/dL
Prediabetes
2-hr post prandial glucose: 140 – 200 mg/dL
DM:
2-hr post prandial glucose ≥200 mg/dL
Commonly used to diagnosis gestational DM (pregnancy)
75 G glucose solution given over 5 min following overnight fasting and
blood drown at 0, 0-2 hr, and at 2 hrs.
No alcohol 3 days before the test, coffee and tea, not permitted drug the
test.
Glycosylated Hemoglobin (HgbA1C)
Normal: 4-6%
DM poorly controlled: >8%
Bound glucose to RBC irreversibly (over 120 days life span) is measured
Hgb A1c reflects a patient's average blood glucose concentration over the
life span of circulating RBCs
Fasting is not required
not reliable in pregnancy
Case: Glucose
T.C., a 68-year-old male, visits his physician to assess control of his type
2 diabetes. T.C.'s Hgb A1c was 9%. What is average glucose
concentration for the last four months? Is T.C.’s blood glucose
controlled?
Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone
Normal: 2 to 10 µ units/L
used to monitor individuals diagnosed with primary hypothyroidism.
Secondary Hypothyroidism:
Due to damage or trauma or tumors to the hypothalamus or pituitary gland
Secretion of thyroid-releasing hormone (TRH) and TSH are impaired or absent
due to this damage.
Primary Hypothyroidism:
low levels of T3 and T4.
Stimulate TRH and TSH release
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diazepam, phenytoin)
acute psychotic episodes
crush injuries
myocardial damage.
CK is composed of M and B subunits, which are further divided into three
isoenzymes: MM, BB, and MB.
The CK-MM isoenzyme is found predominantly in skeletal muscle, the
CK-BB in the brain, and the CK-MB in the myocardium.
Myocardial damage appears to correlate with the amount of CK-MB
released into the serum (i.e., the higher the amount of CK-MB, the more
extensive the myocardial injury
CK-MB typically begins to increase 3 to 6 hours after an acute myocardial
infarction (MI), peaks at 12 to 24 hours
Remains elevated only for 2- to 3-days
CK is released from any damaged cell in which it is stored so conditions
that affect the brain, heart, or skeletal muscle and cause cellular destruction
demonstrate elevated CK levels and correlating isoenzyme source CK-BB,
CK-MB, CK-MM
Raise in CK-MB:
Congestive heart failure, MI, Myocarditis, Tachycardia
Raise I CK-MM
Alcoholism, Hypoxic shock , Dermatomyositis, Hypothyroidism, GI infarction,
Muscular dystrophies, neoplasma ofprostate, bladder or GIT, pumonary edema,
surgery,
Raise in CK-BB
Reye’s syndrome, Brain infarction, Head injury
CK decreased in:
Small stature (Related to lower muscle mass than average
stature)
Sedentary lifestyle (Related to decreased muscle mass)
Case: cardiac markers
S.G., a 44-year-old woman, appears at the ED of a local hospital, with
complaints of sudden-onset chest pain, diaphoresis, and nausea that began
about 1 hour ago. S.G describes her pain as severe and not relieved by
position change, antacids, or nitroglycerin. An electrocardiogram (ECG)
reveals changes consistent with an acute MI. The total CK serum
concentration is 118 units/L (normal, <150) and the CK-MB is 5 units/L
(normal, <12). S.G. was admitted to the coronary care unit to rule out an
acute MI. Why are the total CK and CK-MB serum concentrations within
the normal range in S.G., despite clear evidence supporting an acute MI?
Troponin
Troponins are proteins that mediate the calcium-mediated interaction of
actin and myosin within muscles.
There are two cardiac-specific troponins, cardiac troponin I (cTnI) and
cardiac troponin T (cTnT).
Whereas cTnT is present in cardiac and skeletal muscle cells, cTnI is
present only in cardiac muscle
Compared with the detection of CK-MB, the presence of troponin I is a
more specific and sensitive indicator of myocardial damage
the concentration of cTnI increases within 2 to 4 hours of an acute MI,
enabling clinicians to quickly initiate appropriate therapy.
Troponin also remains elevated for about 10 days compared to the 2- to 3-
day elevation typically observed with CK-MB
The use of troponin as a primary diagnostic test for acute MI is
becoming widely accepted as a standard
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