ketone bodies in serum/plasma
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Introduction
also see ketone bodies in serum/plasma/urine
Indications
- assessment of diabetic ketoacidosis
- verification of compliance with weight-reducing regimen
- evaluation of isopropanol intoxication
Reference interval
- serum: < 1 mg/dL (0.1 mmol/L) with overnight fast
Increases
- chemical interferences
- serum
- aspirin intoxication, IV ethanol, levodopa (Ketostix) streptozocin, insulin (prolonged, excessive)
- hemolysis causes discoloration of test tablets or sticks
- serum
- clinical disorders
- diabetic ketoacidosis*, prolonged fasting, severe carbohydrate restriction with normal fat intake (weight- reducing diets), anorexia nervosa, persistent vomiting, glycogen storage diseases, branched chain ketonuria, methylmalonic aciduria, exercise in untrained subjects, pregnancy, stress, post-anesthesia
- states with markedly increased metabolic rates
- high fever, severe thyrotoxicosis, active acromegaly
- excessive hormone production/administration
* In some cases of diabetes mellitus with elevated blood ketone levels, no ketone bodies appear in the urine.
Methods
- reagent strip: nitroprusside (Miles Inc. Acetotest, Ketostix, Labstix, Multistix, BMC Chemstrip)
- beta-hydroxybutyrate is NOT measured
- acetone is measured by Chemstrip & Acetest
Specimen
- serum or plasma
- cover, deliver to laboratory immediately
- refrigerate until analysis (within 5 days)
- avoid hemolysis
More general terms
Additional terms
- acetoacetate in serum/plasma
- acetoacetate; beta-ketobutyrate; 3-ketobutyrate
- beta(3)-hydroxybutyrate in blood/plasma/serum
References
- ↑ Clinical Guide to Laboratory Tests, 3rd ed. Teitz ed., W.B. Saunders, 1995
- ↑ Ketones, Serum or Plasma Laboratory Test Directory ARUP: http://www.aruplab.com/guides/ug/tests/0020034.jsp