PLASMA AMINO ACID

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PLASMA AMINO ACID
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PLASMA AMINO ACID, in Visit Clinic

Measures amino acid levels in the blood to detect metabolic disorders and guide nutrition or treatment in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
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 PLASMA AMINO ACID Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures the amounts of individual amino acids in your blood plasma. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins and are vital for muscle, brain, and organ function. Measuring their levels helps detect inherited metabolic disorders, such as phenylketonuria or maple syrup urine disease. It can also show problems from liver disease, kidney disease, malnutrition, or certain medications. Doctors use the results to diagnose conditions, monitor treatment or dietary plans, adjust supplements, and guide nutrition for people on special feeds or parenteral nutrition. Results are interpreted alongside clinical symptoms and other lab tests.

PLASMA AMINO ACID Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

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

PLASMA AMINO ACID Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The PLASMA AMINO ACID test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a PLASMA AMINO ACID Test in Visit Clinic?

PLASMA AMINO ACID is often ordered as part of a metabolic or inborn error screening panel. Doctors may request it when a patient has unexplained developmental delay, seizures, poor growth, vomiting, or unusual odors. It helps diagnose inherited metabolic disorders, assess liver or kidney problems, and monitor nutritional or treatment plans. Abnormal results can come from genetic defects, diet, organ disease, or some medicines. Family history of metabolic disorders makes this test especially important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a normal plasma amino acid level in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal total plasma free amino acids typically range about 2–4 mmol/L (≈2000–4000 µmol/L). Individual amino acid concentrations vary widely: some (e.g., glycine, alanine) are tens to a few hundred µmol/L, while others are single-digit to low-double-digit µmol/L. Reference ranges depend on fasting status, age and lab methods; abnormal patterns need clinical interpretation.

What does an amino acid blood test show in Visit Clinic?plus

An amino acid blood test measures concentrations of individual amino acids in the bloodstream. It detects abnormalities from inborn metabolic disorders (e.g., phenylketonuria, maple syrup urine disease), nutritional deficiencies, malabsorption, liver or kidney dysfunction, and catabolic states. Results help diagnose metabolic or neurological symptoms, guide dietary or supplement therapy, and monitor treatment response in metabolic disorders or critical illness.

What blood disorders are revealed by plasma amino acid panel in Visit Clinic?plus

A plasma amino acid panel identifies inherited and acquired disorders of amino acid metabolism and transport. Examples include phenylketonuria, maple syrup urine disease, homocystinuria, tyrosinemia, nonketotic hyperglycinemia, urea‑cycle disorders (citrullinemia, ornithinemia, argininosuccinic aciduria), Hartnup disease and lysinuric protein intolerance. It can also indicate liver disease, malnutrition, or increased protein catabolism when patterns are abnormal.

Does blood plasma contain amino acids in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes. Blood plasma contains free amino acids and protein molecules such as albumin. Free amino acids come from digestion and protein turnover, circulate to supply tissues for protein synthesis, energy metabolism and gluconeogenesis, and are measurable in clinical tests. Plasma amino acid levels reflect diet, liver and kidney function and metabolic state; abnormalities can indicate nutritional or metabolic disorders.

What are the symptoms of amino acid deficiency in Visit Clinic?plus

Amino acid deficiency can cause fatigue, muscle weakness, loss of muscle mass, slowed growth in children and poor wound healing. Other signs include hair loss, brittle nails, dry or inflamed skin, mood changes (irritability or depression), concentration and memory problems, frequent infections from weakened immunity, swelling (edema) and delayed recovery from illness.

What is a plasma blood test for in Visit Clinic?plus

A plasma blood test analyzes the liquid portion of blood after cells are removed to measure substances such as electrolytes, hormones, proteins, antibodies, clotting factors, lipids and glucose. It’s used to assess organ function, diagnose infections and immune conditions, monitor anticoagulant therapy, detect inflammation or metabolic disorders, and guide treatment decisions. Plasma is also used for certain transfusions and specialized laboratory assays.