Cholinesterase (ChE) Test

🧪 Cholinesterase (ChE) Test: Complete Guide

From Liver Function Assessment to Organophosphate Poisoning Diagnosis


1. What Is Cholinesterase?

Cholinesterase (ChE) refers to enzymes that break down acetylcholine, a key neurotransmitter. Two major forms exist:

1) Acetylcholinesterase (AChE, True ChE)

  • Found in red blood cells, nerve tissue, and muscles
  • Critical for synaptic neurotransmission
  • Strongly reduced in organophosphate poisoning

2) Pseudocholinesterase (Butyrylcholinesterase, BChE)

  • Synthesized in the liver, circulates in serum
  • Most clinical laboratory tests measure this serum BChE
  • Reflects hepatic synthetic capacity
  • Involved in metabolism of succinylcholine, a neuromuscular-blocking agent

2. Purpose of the Cholinesterase Test

The test is clinically useful in the following scenarios:

1) Liver Function Assessment

Because BChE is produced in the liver, reduced levels may indicate:

  • Acute/chronic hepatitis
  • Cirrhosis
  • Liver failure

2) Organophosphate (OP) Pesticide Poisoning

  • ChE activity drops sharply (>50%)
  • Essential for diagnosis and treatment monitoring

3) Genetic Pseudocholinesterase Deficiency

Reduced BChE leads to prolonged paralysis after succinylcholine administration.

4) Nutritional & Synthetic Capacity Assessment

Low protein status → reduced enzyme production.


3. Test Method: Colorimetry (Most Widely Used)

Colorimetric assays are standard for automated chemistry analyzers.

Principle

  1. Substrate (e.g., butyrylthiocholine) is hydrolyzed by ChE
  2. Reaction produces thiocholine
  3. Thiocholine reacts to form a colored compound (yellow/red)
  4. Spectrophotometer (typically 405 nm) measures absorbance
  5. Activity is calculated from absorbance change

Advantages

  • Compatible with automated platforms (cobas, AU, ADVIA)
  • High reproducibility
  • Rapid turnaround time

Substrates Used

  • Butyrylthiocholine → serum BChE (routine test)
  • Acetylthiocholine → AChE activity (specialized applications)

4. Reference Range

TestTypical Reference Range
Serum Cholinesterase (BChE)5,000–12,000 U/L

Ranges vary by analyzer and reagent manufacturer. Always verify institution-specific reference values.


5. Clinical Significance

🔻 When ChE Decreases (Most Important Clinically)

ConditionExplanation
Organophosphate poisoningRapid & profound drop (>50%)
Liver diseasesAcute hepatitis, cirrhosis, hepatic failure
Malnutrition / low protein stateReduced synthesis
Sepsis, shockHepatic perfusion decline
PregnancyMild physiologic reduction
Genetic deficiencyProlonged succinylcholine effect

🔺 When ChE Increases

(Less clinically critical)

ConditionExplanation
ObesityIncreased hepatic synthesis
Diabetes mellitusElevated in some cases
Hyperlipidemia or high protein statesSynthetic upregulation
HyperthyroidismIncreased metabolic rate

6. Interpretation & Precautions

✔ 1) Always interpret with other liver function tests

AST, ALT, PT/INR, Albumin provide complementary information.

✔ 2) In suspected OP poisoning

  • Compare with baseline (if available)
  • Monitor serial trends for recovery

✔ 3) Consider pregnancy & nutritional status

Physiologic or nutritional causes can lower ChE without liver disease.

✔ 4) For suspected pseudocholinesterase deficiency

Document anesthesia complications for future surgeries.

✔ 5) Check analyzer-specific reference ranges

Different instruments produce slightly different values.


7. Summary

Cholinesterase testing provides valuable information on liver synthetic function, nutritional status, and toxicological emergencies such as organophosphate poisoning. Understanding the principles of colorimetric testing and proper interpretation is essential for accurate clinical decision-making.


8. References

  • Burtis CA, Bruns DE. Tietz Fundamentals of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics.
  • Rifai N, et al. Tietz Textbook of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics.
  • WHO: Organophosphate Pesticide Exposure Guidelines.
  • Ellman GL. “Tissue sulfhydryl groups.” Arch Biochem Biophys (1959).
  • Laboratory Test Handbook.

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