Lactate dehydrogenase (LD) isoenzymes-994

Test info

  
Lactate dehydrogenase (LD) isoenzymes
  
994
  
LAB994
  
MSO
  

Diagnose myocardial infarction (MI). Three fractions normally may be found, each an isoenzyme:
• MM is found in normal serum.
• MB is the myocardial fraction associated with MI and occurs in certain other states. MB can be used in estimation of infarct size.
MB increases have been reported with entities that cause damage to the myocardium, such as myocarditis, some instances of cardiomyopathy, and with extensive rhabdomyolysis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, malignant hyperthermia, polymyositis, dermatomyositis, mixed connective tissue disease, myoglobinemia, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Reye syndrome, and rarely in rheumatoid arthritis with high titer RF. CK-MB does not generally abruptly rise and fall in such nonacute MI settings, as it does in acute myocardial infarct (AMI).
• BB is rarely present. BB has been described as a marker for adenocarcinoma of the prostate, breast, ovary, colon, adenocarcinomas of gastrointestinal tract, and for small cell anaplastic carcinoma of lung. BB has been reported with severe shock and/or hypothermia, infarction of bowel, brain injury, stroke, as a genetic marker in some families with malignant pyrexia, and with MB in alcoholic myopathy.

Specimen

  
Serum
  

Gold SST

  
2.0 mL
  
1.5 mL
  

Spin, separate and freeze

  

LabCorp 12mL plastic transport tube labelled as serum

  

Freeze

Refrigerate - 48 hours

  

Moderate or excessive hemolysis

Performance

  
LabCorp Burlington (002154): R-NX
  
Mo - Fr
  
1 - 5 days
  

Total: kinetic

Isoenzymes: agarose gel electrophoresis with densitometry

Clinical and Interpretive info

  

An interpretive report will be provided

  

The LDH isoenzyme pattern demonstrates LD1 greater than LD2 (LD1>LD2)

  

CK-MB is found in much higher concentrations in cardiac muscle than in ordinary skeletal muscle.

CK-MB is usually not elevated in exercise (total CK elevated); myxedema (total CK elevated in about half of cases); injections into muscle (total CK elevated); strokes, CVA, and other brain disorders in which total CK may be increased; pericarditis; pneumonias or other lung diseases; pulmonary embolus; seizures (CK may be very high but no great MB increase, if any). Although CK-MB is not usually increased in angina, some CK-MB elevations are recognized in angina patients, depending partly on laboratory methodology.

Atypical forms of CK occur. Macro CK type 1 is usually a complex of CK-BB and IgG (or rarely CK-MM with IgA) and created via an antigen-antibody reaction. It can lead to the false-positive diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction by CK-MB interference in some immunoassay techniques. In quantitative total CK assays, macro CK is indistinguishable from normal CK and can cause an elevation of the total CK, although total CK may also be normal. Macroenzymes should be suspected when enzyme levels are persistently raised with relatively constant levels and there is no obvious clinical explanation or other laboratory abnormality. The clinical relevance of macro CK type 1 is not clearly established. It is not associated with a particular type of disease and has been observed in patients with various diseases, as well as in apparently healthy individuals. Occurring more often in women than men and in patients older than 70 years than in the 20 to 69 year age group, it is likely a marker or consequence of cellular damage in a minority of predisposed individuals, predominantly women and elderly people. There are several reported disease associations, including hypothyroidism, neoplasia, autoimmune disease, myositis, and cardiovascular disease. The last two have the strongest reported associations and may support the diagnosis of an autoimmune process, but this may in part be explained by a higher frequency of requests for CK levels in these groups of patients. Myositis, including autoimmune myositis, polymyositis, malignancy-associated dermatomyositis, and drug-induced myositis, has been diagnosed in >50% of the patients with macro CK type 1.
Macro CK type 2 is an oligomeric mitochondrial CK complex that migrates cathodically, or close to CK-MM. It is found primarily in adults who are severely ill with malignancies or liver disease or in children who have myocardial disease. It occurs transiently in about 1% of hospitalized patients and indicates a poor prognosis, except in children.

Billing

  
82552
82550
  
Result 2157-6

Tracking

  
05/30/2019
  
04/13/2020