Cholinesterase-994

Test info

  
Cholinesterase
  
994
  
LAB994
  
MSO
  
Pseudocholinesterase
  

Evaluate preoperative patients for succinylcholine (suxamethonium) anesthetic sensitivity, genetic or secondary to insecticide exposure, in appropriate circumstances. To prevent or evaluate prolonged anesthetic effect, prolonged apnea, after surgery. Very small amounts (0.04−0.06 mg/kg) of succinylcholine are needed to obtain 90% of neuromuscular blockade in patients with low levels of plasma cholinesterase activity.

Monitor organophosphorous or carbamate insecticide poisoning, in which level is decreased; establish patient's baseline value before exposure. Indications include such pesticide exposure, especially with miosis, blurred vision, muscle weakness, twitching, and fasciculation, bradycardia, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, salivation, sweating, pulmonary edema, arrhythmias, and convulsions. The value of assessing risk status in persons exposed to organophosphate insecticides on the basis of plasma or serum cholinesterase levels alone has been called into question. Are normal levels indicative of no exposure or of a genetic variant with or without exposure? There are interpretive problems with low or high values.

Family studies may be done when an individual with a genetically abnormal type is documented by serum pseudocholinesterase deficiency and, ideally, confirmed by phenotyping.

Specimen

  
Serum
  
  
0.5 mL
  
0.25 mL
  

Immediately following collection, mix sample by gently inverting 5 times

  
  1. Allow sample to clot for 30 minutes
  2. Spin within two (2) hours of collection
  3. Transfer serum to a Transfer vial/tube with cap - 12mL (LabCorp), labelled as serum
  
  
  1. Allow sample to clot 
  2. Spin  within 30 minutes of sample collection
  3. Transfer serum to a Transfer vial/tube with cap - 12mL (LabCorp), labelled as serum
  

Ambient (preferred) - 14 days

 

Refrigerated - 14 days

 

Frozen - 14 days

 

Freeze/thaw cycles - stable x3

  
  • Whole blood specimen (a 20% to 25% increase can occur over a 24-hour period if serum is left on the clot)
  • Hemolysis

Performance

  
LabCorp Burlington (007211): R-NX
  
Mo - Sa
  
5 days
  

Spectrophotometry (Ellman) - kinetic

Clinical and Interpretive info

  

Male
1 day – 5 yrs:  Not established
6 – 17 years:   1396−3282 U/L
18 – 70 years: 1801−3537 U/L
≥ 71 years:      903−2964 U/L

Female
1 day – 1 yr:    Not established
2 – 12 years:   1649−2940 U/L
13 - 50 years:  1247−2978 U/L
51 - 80 years:  1355−3299 U/L
≥ 81 years:      Not established

  

Two types of cholinesterase are found in blood: “true” cholinesterase (acetylcholinesterase) in red cells and “pseudocholinesterase” (acylcholine acylhydrolase) in serum (plasma). Low serum cholinesterase activity may relate to exposure to insecticides or to one of a number of variant genotypes. Dibucaine and fluoride numbers are useful to phenotype such homozygous and heterozygous individuals, who are genetically sensitive to succinylcholine.

One patient in 1500 is susceptible to succinyldicholine anesthetic mishap. Evans and Wroe suggest that an enzyme level in serum below 2.5 standard deviations will pick up 90% of sensitive individuals using propionylthiocholine as substrate. Rather marked inhibition can be found without symptoms.

Plasmapheresis has been noted to decrease the level of plasma cholinesterase. Patients with abnormally low cholinesterase activity after transfusion of blood or plasma will experience temporary augmentation of enzyme level. In estimating the duration of this enhanced activity, measures of plasma cholinesterase half-life have been utilized. The true half-life value has, however, been uncertain. A half-life value determined by measuring the rate of disappearance after intravenous injection of human cholinesterase has provided an average value of 11 days.


A low level of activity of pseudocholinesterase has been demonstrated in cerebrospinal fluid, at about 1/20 to 1/100 the activity present in the corresponding plasma. With clinical conditions characterized by bleeding into the CSF, pseudocholinesterase activity increases to one-fourth to one-half that of plasma.

Patients with a variety of carcinomas have been reported to accumulate an embryonic type of cholinesterase activity in their sera. Such novel cholinesterase activity was found only in the sera of patients undergoing antitumor therapy (eg, chemotherapy or radiation therapy and/or hormone therapy).

Increase in acetylcholinesterase activity, notably, in an acetylcholinesterase:butyrylcholine esterase ratio (histochemical study, not as measured in serum) has provided discriminatory diagnostic value in some cases of Hirschsprung disease.

Billing

  
82480
  
Result 2098-2

Tracking

  
05/31/2019
  
02/16/2024
  
02/16/2024