C-Peptide

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C-Peptide
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C-Peptide, in Visit Clinic

Measures C-peptide in blood to evaluate natural insulin production and help diagnose or monitor diabetes in Visit Clinic.

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SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
25 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a C-Peptide Test in Visit Clinic?

C-peptide is a protein fragment released when the pancreas makes insulin. The blood test measures C-peptide to show how much insulin your body produces on its own. It is useful because it separates natural insulin production from injected insulin. Doctors use it to help tell type 1 from type 2 diabetes. It also helps find insulin-producing tumors and explains unexplained low blood sugar. Clinicians monitor C-peptide over time to assess pancreatic beta cell function. Results guide treatment decisions, such as whether someone might need insulin or other medicines. The test is often done with glucose tests and other diabetes checks for a fuller picture.

C-Peptide Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Do not eat or drink anything except water for 8-12 hours before the test

C-Peptide Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The C-Peptide test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a C-Peptide Test in Visit Clinic?

C-Peptide is often included in diabetes workups and hypoglycemia evaluations to assess pancreatic insulin production. Doctors may order it when blood sugars are uncontrolled, when a person has unexpected low blood sugar, or when distinguishing between type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Abnormal results can come from beta cell failure, insulin resistance, insulinoma, or use of injected insulin. A family history of diabetes or pancreatic disease can make this test particularly important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does a C-peptide tell you in Visit Clinic?plus

C-peptide reflects how much insulin the pancreas is making because it is released when proinsulin is split into insulin and C-peptide. Measuring C-peptide assesses beta-cell function and endogenous insulin production, helps distinguish type 1 (low) from type 2 diabetes (normal/high), detects insulinoma or factitious insulin use (low with injected insulin), and guides treatment and prognosis.

Is C-peptide elevated in type 2 diabetes in Visit Clinic?plus

C-peptide is often normal or elevated in early type 2 diabetes because insulin resistance drives higher endogenous insulin secretion. Over time, progressive beta-cell dysfunction can reduce C-peptide levels, so advanced or long-standing type 2 disease may show low or falling C-peptide. Measurement helps distinguish insulin deficiency from insulin resistance and guides treatment decisions.

Is C-peptide low in type 1 diabetes in Visit Clinic?plus

In type 1 diabetes, C‑peptide is typically low or undetectable because autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells reduces endogenous insulin production. Soon after onset some residual C‑peptide may be present, but levels usually decline over time. Measuring fasting or stimulated C‑peptide helps distinguish type 1 from type 2 diabetes and assess remaining beta‑cell function.

What foods increase C peptides in Visit Clinic?plus

Foods that raise C‑peptide (i.e., stimulate insulin secretion) are primarily carbohydrate‑rich, especially high‑glycemic/refined carbs and sugary drinks (white bread, sweets, white rice). Protein‑rich foods—dairy, eggs, meat, and fish—can also boost insulin because certain amino acids (arginine, leucine) stimulate secretion. Mixed high‑carb/protein meals provoke larger C‑peptide responses than low‑GI, high‑fiber or plant‑based meals, which blunt spikes.

What conditions cause high C-peptide in Visit Clinic?plus

High C‑peptide indicates increased endogenous insulin production and can be seen with insulinoma (insulin‑secreting tumor), type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance (obesity, metabolic syndrome), treatment with insulin secretagogues (sulfonylureas/meglitinides), conditions causing severe insulin resistance (Cushing’s, acromegaly, pregnancy), postprandial states, and reduced renal clearance (chronic kidney disease). Exogenous insulin does not raise C‑peptide.

Is C-peptide a tumor marker in Visit Clinic?plus

C‑peptide is not a general tumor marker. It reflects endogenous insulin secretion and is used to distinguish endogenous from exogenous insulin, assess beta‑cell function, and help diagnose insulin‑secreting tumors (insulinomas) or factitious hypoglycemia. Elevated C‑peptide may suggest insulinoma but must be interpreted with glucose, insulin assays and imaging—it's a functional marker, not a broad cancer screening test.