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Published byTyler Cross Modified over 9 years ago
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Lactate Dehydrogenase: pathophysiologic marker Sara Pape-Salmon NP(F) Mental Health and Addictions Service, VIHA
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What is Lactate Dehydrogenase? Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) Intracellular enzyme Found in the cells of many body tissues: Heart, liver, RBC, kidneys, skeletal muscle brain, and lungs. When these cells become injured, they lyse & LDH enters the blood stream.
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LDH Fractions: LDH - although nearly ubiquitous body distribution, five separate fractions exist: LDH 1 LDH 2 LDH 3 LDH 4 LDH 5
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LDH Tissue Distribution: LDH - Total LDH LDH 1 - Found in HEART predominantly LDH 2 - RETICULOENDOTHELIAL system LDH 3 - LUNGS (predominantly) LDH 4 - KIDNEY, PLACENTA, PANCREAS LDH 5 - mainly LIVER and STRIATED MUSCLE
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LDH & certain diseases: LDH 1 - indicates MI (> LDH 2). Testicular tumors. LDH 2 & 3 - Pulmonary disease: CHF, embolism, infarct, pneumonia, lymphoma & other reticuloendothelial tumors. AIDS - histoplasmosis. LDH 4 - Pancreatitis, kidney disease LDH 5 - liver disease (hepatitis, cirrhosis, neoplasm) ischemic bowel disease, striated muscle disease (muscular dystrophy, strenuous exercise)
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Should we be ordering LDH? Although certain LDH patterns are classic for certain diseases, it is non-specific. There are other tests/enzymes that are more specific Can it be an important adjunct - yes…? e.g. declining transaminases in context of liver disease e.g. differentiating angina from heart attack e.g. differentiate hepatic disease from benign condition (Gilbert’s disease vs. hemolytic disease)
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