CHEMPATH: Enzymes and Cardiac Markers Flashcards
Where is ALP found?
- Intestines
- Bone
- Liver
- Placenta
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/983/210/a_image_thumb.png?1638958275)
How can you differentiate between liver and bone ALP?
- GGT measurement (if GGT raised with ALP implies ALP is coming from the liver)
- Electrophoresis separation
- Bone-specific ALP immunoassay
What is the clinical approach to unexplained high ALP?
- Look at LFTs - ALT, GGT
- Vitamin D levels - if deficiency then increased bone metabolism can cause increased ALP
- ALP isoenzymes by electrophoresis can also be done
Does reference range vary for ALP according to anything?
Age and sex in childhood, then evens out
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/983/525/a_image_thumb.png?1638958547)
When does raised ALP indicate osteoporosis?
Only when a fracture is present
Summarise the pathological and physiological causes of raised ALP.
Physiological
- Pregnancy – 3rd trimester (from placenta)
- Childhood – growth spurts
Pathological:
- <5x upper limit:
- Bone – tumours, fractures, osteomyelitis
- Liver – infiltrative disease, hepatitis (doesn’t go up nearly as much as AST/ALT)
- >5x upper limit:
- Bone – Paget’s disease, osteomalacia
- Liver – cholestasis, cirrhosis
What are ALT and AST invovled in?
Amino acid metabolism
What are the organs linked to raised ALT? List some causes.
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/984/020/a_image_thumb.png?1638959067)
What are the organs linked to raised GGT? List some causes.
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/984/346/a_image_thumb.png?1638959085)
What are the organs linked to rasied LDH? List some causes.
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/984/378/a_image_thumb.png?1638959142)
What are the organs linked to rasied serum amylase? List some causes.
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/984/472/a_image_thumb.png?1638959186)
What are the 3 forms of CK?
Three forms (they are dimers containing either M (muscle) and B (brain) subunits):
- CK-MM = skeletal muscles (responsible for almost the entire normal plasma activity)
- CK-MB = cardiac muscle
- CK-BB = brain (activity is minimal even in severe brain damage)
Where is CK found? What conditions?
Statins can also cause myopathy but this is RARE
![](https://s3.amazonaws.com/brainscape-prod/system/cm/365/984/782/a_image_thumb.png?1638959478)
What medications can commonly cause raised CK? What genetic condition? What physiological factors?
- Medications
- Mostly, w/ simvastatin when co-prescribed other medications involved in CYP3A4 – i.e. clarithromycin
- Can have statin-related myopathy (check levels of CK-MM, should be increased 10-fold)
- Muscle damage due to any cause
- Myopathy (e.g. Duchennes) = >x10 Upper Limit
- Myocardial infarction= >x10 UL
- Severe exercise = 5x UL
- Physiological (Afro-Caribbean) = <5x UL
When should troponin be measured in MI?
- Troponins:
- Rise at 4-6 hours post MI
- Peaks at 12-24 hours
- Remains elevated for 3-10 days
- MEASURE TWICE - measured at 6 hours** and again at **12 hours after the onset of chest pain
After 12-24 hours if there is no rise in troponin, then you have almost certainly not had an MI as troponin at 12-24 hours is 100% sensitive + 98% specific