🧪 LDH (Lactate Dehydrogenase) Test

🧪 LDH (Lactate Dehydrogenase) Test: A Complete Clinical Guide

One of the most sensitive markers for tissue damage, hemolysis, and tumor activity


Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) is an intracellular enzyme present in almost every tissue of the human body. When cells are damaged, LDH is released into the bloodstream, making it a highly sensitive—but nonspecific—marker of cellular injury.

LDH levels rise in conditions involving organ damage, hypoxia, hemolysis, inflammation, and malignancies with high tumor turnover. This article provides an updated, evidence-based overview of its applications in modern clinical practice.


1. 🧬 What Is LDH?

LDH catalyzes the interconversion of lactate and pyruvate in cellular metabolism:

Lactate ⇄ Pyruvate

LDH consists of five isoenzymes (LDH1–LDH5), each predominant in specific organs:

IsoenzymeMajor Locations
LDH1Heart, red blood cells
LDH2Reticuloendothelial system
LDH3Lungs
LDH4Liver, skeletal muscle
LDH5Liver, skeletal muscle

💡 Total LDH elevation indicates cellular injury, while isoenzyme patterns may help identify the damaged tissue.


2. 🎯 Clinical Indications for the LDH Test

✔ 1) Assessing Tissue Damage

Useful when evaluating:

  • Hepatic injury
  • Pulmonary diseases
  • Renal infarction
  • Muscle injury
  • Inflammatory conditions

Often elevated early, serving as a sensitive first clue.


✔ 2) Evaluation of Hemolytic Anemia

Red blood cells contain abundant LDH, especially LDH1.

Hemolysis triad:

  • ↑ LDH
  • ↓ Haptoglobin
  • ↑ Indirect bilirubin

Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (TTP, HUS, DIC) shows marked LDH elevation.


✔ 3) Tumor Marker for Malignancies

LDH correlates with tumor burden and cell turnover in:

  • Non-Hodgkin and Hodgkin lymphoma
  • Leukemia (AML, ALL)
  • Testicular cancer (especially seminoma)
  • Advanced solid tumors

Higher LDH → poorer prognosis.


✔ 4) Liver, Kidney, and Muscle Disorders

  • Liver: rises in hepatitis, cirrhosis, drug-induced injury
  • Muscle: elevated in rhabdomyolysis, myositis
  • Kidneys: elevated in renal infarction, glomerulonephritis

✔ 5) Pulmonary Conditions

LDH increases in:

  • Pulmonary embolism (PE)
  • Pneumonia
  • Interstitial lung disease

3. 🔬 Test Method: UV Kinetic Assay (Standard Technique)

Most hospital laboratories use the UV kinetic method, based on measuring NADH absorbance at 340 nm.

✔ Principle

LDH catalyzes:

Pyruvate + NADH → Lactate + NAD⁺

  • NADH strongly absorbs light at 340 nm
  • As LDH converts NADH to NAD⁺, absorbance decreases
  • Rate of absorbance decline = LDH activity

✔ Advantages

  • Rapid and accurate
  • Fully automated (cobas, Architect, AU analyzers)
  • Good inter-lab reproducibility

4. 📊 Reference Ranges

Typical reference range (may vary by laboratory):

GroupLDH Reference Range
Adults119–229 U/L
ChildrenSlightly higher normal values
IsoenzymesLab-specific ranges

Pregnancy, recent exercise, or mild hemolysis may cause minor elevation.


5. 🩺 Clinical Interpretation of LDH Levels

🔺 LDH Elevation (Clinically Significant Conditions)

1) Hemolytic Anemia

  • Marked elevation of LDH1 & LDH2
  • Strong rise in microangiopathic hemolysis (TTP, HUS, DIC)

2) Liver Injury

  • Viral hepatitis
  • Cirrhosis
  • Drug-induced liver injury
  • Often accompanied by ALT/AST elevation
  • LDH5 predominance may be noted

3) Myocardial Infarction (Historical Use)

Not routinely used today (troponin is preferred).
However:

LDH1 > LDH2 (“LDH flip”) → classic pattern in myocardial infarction.


4) Malignancies / High Tumor Burden

  • Lymphoma
  • Leukemia
  • Testicular tumors (seminoma)
  • Metastatic cancers
  • Indicator of poor prognosis

5) Pulmonary Disease

  • Pulmonary embolism
  • Pneumonia
  • ILD

6) Renal Disorders

  • Renal infarction
  • Glomerulonephritis

7) Muscle Injury

  • Rhabdomyolysis
  • Myositis

8) Severe Hypoxia, Shock, Sepsis

Global tissue hypoxia → LDH spike.


🔻 LDH Decrease (Rare and Less Clinically Relevant)

Possible causes include:

  • High-dose vitamin C
  • Rare hereditary LDH deficiency
  • Severe, end-stage hepatic failure (enzyme production reduced)

6. 🩻 Important Pitfalls in LDH Interpretation

⚠ 1) Hemolysis of the Sample (Most Common Cause of False Elevation)

Even slight hemolysis during collection, transport, or centrifugation increases LDH significantly.

Always check hemolysis index (HI).


⚠ 2) Recent Strenuous Exercise

Can temporarily elevate LDH for 24–48 hours.


⚠ 3) Isolated LDH Elevation in NASH

Occasionally LDH rises even when ALT/AST are normal.


⚠ 4) ESRD (End-Stage Kidney Disease)

Reduced clearance → Mild LDH elevation possible.


⚠ 5) Tumor Evaluation Requires Additional Markers

LDH must be interpreted alongside:

  • CRP
  • Ferritin
  • β-hCG
  • AFP
  • Imaging

7. 📚 References

  • Bishop ML, Fody EP, Schoeff LE. Clinical Chemistry: Principles, Techniques, and Correlations.
  • Burtis CA, Ashwood ER. Tietz Textbook of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics.
  • Lacher DA et al. “Laboratory Reference Intervals for LDH.” Clin Biochem.
  • Henry JB. Clinical Diagnosis and Management by Laboratory Methods.
  • AACC Guidelines on LDH Utilization.
  • Hoffbrand AV. Postgraduate Haematology.

Similar Posts

답글 남기기

이메일 주소는 공개되지 않습니다. 필수 필드는 *로 표시됩니다