Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml)

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Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml)
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Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml), in Visit Clinic

Measures LDH enzyme in abdominal ascitic fluid to detect infection, inflammation, or cancer involvement early in Visit Clinic.

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

What is a Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in ascitic fluid, the fluid that collects in the belly. LDH is an enzyme found in many cells. High LDH in fluid usually means cells are damaged or dying. Measuring LDH helps doctors tell if fluid is a simple transudate (from heart or liver failure) or an exudate (from infection, inflammation, or cancer). It helps detect peritonitis, liver disease complications, cancer spread, and pancreatitis. Doctors use LDH along with other fluid tests, cultures, and imaging. Results guide treatment decisions like antibiotics, drainage, further sampling, or cancer investigations. The test gives useful clues but is not usually diagnostic by itself.

Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) Test in Visit Clinic?

Lactate Dehyderogenase (LDH) Ascitic Fluid (1ml) is usually included with routine ascitic fluid analysis (cell count, protein, albumin/SAAG, culture, and cytology). Doctors order it when patients have abdominal swelling, pain, fever, or unexplained weight changes. It helps distinguish fluid caused by liver or heart failure from fluid caused by infection, inflammation, or cancer. Abnormal results come from infections, malignancy, pancreatitis, or severe liver disease. A family history of liver disease or cancers may make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a high LDH level in ascitic fluid in Visit Clinic?plus

A high LDH level in ascitic (peritoneal) fluid is generally considered when fluid LDH exceeds about 200 IU/L or the ascites-to-serum LDH ratio is >0.6. Such elevations suggest exudative processes — infection (including bacterial peritonitis), malignancy, or significant inflammation — rather than simple cirrhotic transudate, and prompt further diagnostic workup (cultures, cytology, imaging).

What if the LDH level is high in Visit Clinic?plus

If LDH (lactate dehydrogenase) is high, it indicates tissue damage or cell breakdown but is nonspecific. Causes include hemolysis, liver disease, heart attack, muscle injury, infections, or some cancers. Your clinician will repeat tests, review symptoms and other labs (e.g., AST, ALT, CK, troponin, bilirubin) and may order imaging or targeted tests. Treatment addresses the underlying cause; follow up promptly with your provider.

What is the normal range for lactate dehydrogenase fluid in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal LDH in body fluids varies by site. Pleural and peritoneal (ascitic) fluid LDH is typically low—generally <200 U/L or below two‑thirds of the upper serum LDH limit. Cerebrospinal fluid LDH is much lower, usually under ~20 U/L. Serum LDH is about 140–280 U/L; fluid interpretation commonly compares fluid LDH to serum (e.g., Light’s criteria for pleural effusions).

What level of LDH indicates lymphoma in Visit Clinic?plus

There’s no single LDH cutoff that proves lymphoma. Any value above your laboratory’s upper limit is a nonspecific red flag; clinicians use elevated LDH as a prognostic marker. Levels roughly two times the upper limit (for example >500 U/L when the normal upper limit is ~250 U/L) often indicate high tumor burden or more aggressive disease and prompt further investigation.

What stage of liver disease is ascites in Visit Clinic?plus

Ascites is a hallmark of decompensated liver disease—usually advanced cirrhosis due to portal hypertension and impaired liver function. It marks progression from compensated to decompensated cirrhosis and typically reflects more severe stages (worse Child‑Pugh and higher MELD scores). Its appearance requires prompt medical assessment and management to address complications and underlying liver failure.

What does malignant ascites look like in Visit Clinic?plus

Malignant ascites causes progressive abdominal distension with a tense, fluid-filled belly. On exam there is shifting dullness and a positive fluid wave. The fluid often appears straw‑colored, cloudy, blood‑tinged or milky (chylous) depending on tumor type. Patients commonly have early satiety, breathlessness and weight loss; imaging may show peritoneal nodules or omental caking indicating cancer spread.