Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative)

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Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative)
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Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative), in Visit Clinic

Measures cotinine, the main nicotine breakdown product, to detect tobacco use and monitor quitting efforts in Visit Clinic.

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

What is a Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) Test in Visit Clinic?

Cotinine is a chemical your body makes when it breaks down nicotine. The quantitative cotinine blood test measures the amount of cotinine in the blood. Cotinine levels show recent tobacco or nicotine product use, including cigarettes, e-cigarettes, patches, and gum. This helps doctors check smoking status, monitor quit attempts, and detect secondhand smoke exposure. It can also be used in prenatal care and workplace testing. Results help guide treatment, counselling, and medication decisions. High levels point to recent nicotine intake while low or absent levels suggest no recent use. Doctors use the test to verify abstinence, adjust cessation plans, and assess exposure risks to lungs, heart, and pregnancy outcomes. Turnaround is usually quick.

Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) Test in Visit Clinic?

Cotinine Test Processing (Quantitative) is commonly included in smoking-cessation panels, prenatal screening, and workplace exposure panels. Doctors order it when they need to confirm smoking status, investigate suspected secondhand exposure, or monitor progress during quitting programs. It helps detect tobacco or nicotine use and assess exposure risks. Abnormal results are usually from active smoking, vaping, or nicotine replacement. Family history of lung disease, heart disease, or pregnancy complications may make testing important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a quantitative cotinine test in Visit Clinic?plus

A quantitative cotinine test measures the amount of cotinine — the main nicotine metabolite — in blood, saliva, or urine to objectively assess recent nicotine exposure. Results quantify exposure level, helping distinguish active smoking from secondhand exposure and monitor cessation or prenatal exposure. Cotinine’s half-life (about 16–20 hours) makes the test reliable for detecting tobacco use within several days; thresholds guide interpretation.

What is cotinine test processing qualitative in Visit Clinic?plus

A qualitative cotinine test detects whether cotinine — the main nicotine metabolite — is present in urine, saliva, or blood, indicating recent tobacco use or exposure. Processing typically involves collecting a sample and running an immunoassay (rapid dipstick or lab ELISA) that yields a positive/negative result against a cutoff. Positive screens can be confirmed by quantitative methods (GC‑MS) for accuracy.

What does a positive cotinine test mean in Visit Clinic?plus

A positive cotinine test means nicotine exposure. It detects cotinine, a nicotine breakdown product, indicating recent use of cigarettes, e-cigarettes, nicotine replacement, or significant secondhand smoke. It doesn’t identify the exact source. Cotinine is usually detectable in blood, urine, or saliva for about 1–3 days (occasionally up to a week) and for months in hair; interpretation depends on timing and levels.

How to read cotinine test results in Visit Clinic?plus

Cotinine results are reported in ng/mL. Typical cutoffs: serum/plasma <10 ng/mL suggests non‑smoker; 10–100 ng/mL may indicate passive exposure or light use; >100 ng/mL indicates active smoking. For urine, <50 ng/mL often denotes non‑exposure, 50–200 ng/mL passive exposure, >200 ng/mL active smoking. Interpret by specimen type, timing, nicotine replacement, and lab reference ranges; consult a clinician.

How to remove cotinine from the body in Visit Clinic?plus

Stop all nicotine exposure — time is the main way to clear cotinine. Its half‑life is about 16–20 hours, so levels usually fall substantially within 3–4 days, though in heavy users it can take up to 2–3 weeks. Support clearance by staying well hydrated, exercising to boost metabolism, eating antioxidant‑rich foods, and resting. There’s no proven quick “detox”; consult a clinician for quitting help.

What is the cut off level of cotinine in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

A commonly used urine cotinine cutoff to distinguish active smokers from nonsmokers is about 50 ng/mL. To reduce misclassification from secondhand exposure, some labs use higher thresholds (typically 100–200 ng/mL). Cutoffs vary by assay and purpose, so interpretation should consider testing method, timing, and clinical context. Cotinine is a stable nicotine metabolite with a roughly 16–20 hour half-life.