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Alkaline Phosphatase

Code:8047

Synonyms
Фосфатаза щелочная.ALPALK PHOSALKPAlkaline phosphatase
IncludesAlkaline phosphatase

Analysis details

Methodology

  • Colorimetric method
  • Kinetic colorimetric method

Expected Turnaround Time

1 day

Special Instructions

  • Do not eat or drink anything except water for 12 hours before the blood draw.
  • Avoid vigorous activity and emotional stress for at least 30 minutes prior to collection.
  • Do not smoke during the 30 minutes before phlebotomy.

How to use

The alkaline phosphatase (ALP, alk phos) test assists in detecting and characterizing hepatobiliary disease with cholestasis, including extrahepatic biliary obstruction such as gallstones or pancreatic neoplasm, often in conjunction with gamma-glutamyltransferase. It supports evaluation when clinical or laboratory findings suggest impaired bile flow. It also aids assessment of conditions with increased osteoblastic activity, including physiologic growth, fracture healing, and metastatic involvement of bone. When ALP is elevated, repeat testing is used to monitor disease activity and therapeutic response.

Limitations

Alkaline phosphatase is expressed on hepatocytes and biliary epithelium and catalyzes dephosphorylation reactions; measured serum activity reflects enzyme released from cells rather than an in vivo circulating function. Bile produced by hepatocytes flows through canaliculi into the hepatic ducts and common bile duct; interruption of this flow leads to pronounced ALP elevations consistent with cholestasis. In the skeleton, ALP is produced by osteoblasts and parallels bone formation, with physiologically higher values in children and during fracture repair. Placental and intestinal isoenzymes can also contribute to total ALP activity.

UnitU/L
Reference interval
AgeMinMax
≤16y1.292.26
16y–118y0.811.45
IndicationsIncluded in hepatic function panels for routine health screening and preoperative assessment., Workup of suspected hepatobiliary disease or cholestasis presenting with jaundice, right upper-quadrant pain, dark urine, pale stools, or pruritus., Assessment of nonspecific systemic complaints that may indicate liver disease, such as asthenia, fatigue, anorexia, nausea, or vomiting., Evaluation of bone disorders manifested by bone pain, skeletal deformity, or recurrent/pathologic fractures.

Possible Causes of Abnormal Results

Increased levels

  • acetaminophen
  • allopurinol
  • antibiotics
  • aspirin
  • childhood and adolescence
  • pregnancy
  • recent fracture
  • specimen cooled after collection

Decreased levels

  • oral contraceptives

Specimen Requirements

SpecimenSerum
ContainerGold/Tiger Top (SST, Gel Separator)
Volume1 mL (min 0.7 mL)
Storage InstructionsRoom temperature, Refrigerated, Frozen