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Cholinesterase

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Pseudocholinesterase / Butyrylcholinesterase – Liver Function & Organophosphate Exposure Marker)

Synonyms

  • Cholinesterase
  • Pseudocholinesterase (PChE)
  • Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE)
  • Plasma cholinesterase
  • Serum cholinesterase
  • Non-specific cholinesterase

(Note: Acetylcholinesterase = RBC cholinesterase; different enzyme.)

Units of Measurement

  • nkat/L
  • µkat/L
  • nmol/(s·L)
  • µmol/(s·L)
  • U/L
  • IU/L
  • µmol/(min·L)
  • µmol/(h·L)
  • µmol/(h·mL)

Description

Cholinesterase (pseudocholinesterase) is a liver-synthesized enzyme that hydrolyzes choline-based esters. It is distinct from acetylcholinesterase, which is present in nerve tissue and RBCs.

Major clinical roles:

  • Evaluation of organophosphate & carbamate poisoning
  • Assessment of liver synthetic function
  • Genetic cholinesterase deficiency (succinylcholine sensitivity)
  • Monitoring exposure in agricultural workers

Cholinesterase is depressed in poisoning because organophosphate compounds irreversibly inhibit the enzyme.

Physiological Role

  • Detoxification of ester-based drugs (succinylcholine, mivacurium)
  • Hydrolysis of choline esters in plasma
  • Protects cholinergic synapses from overstimulation
  • Indicator of liver synthetic capacity (decreases when liver fails)

Clinical Significance

Low Cholinesterase Levels (Most Important)

1. Organophosphate / Carbamate Poisoning

  • Marked reduction in enzyme activity
  • Used for diagnosis & monitoring
  • Correlates with severity
  • Enzyme activity recovers slowly (2–4 weeks)

2. Liver Disease

Low in:

  • Cirrhosis
  • Hepatitis
  • Liver failure
  • Malnutrition
  • Alcoholic liver disease

3. Genetic Variants (Pseudocholinesterase Deficiency)

  • Leads to prolonged apnea after succinylcholine during anesthesia
  • Dibucaine inhibition test helps identify variants
  • Causes:
    • Atypical enzyme
    • Silent enzyme
    • Fluoride-resistant enzyme

4. Pregnancy

Levels fall by 20–40% during third trimester.

5. Drugs

Decreased by:

  • Oral contraceptives
  • Estrogen therapy
  • MAO inhibitors
  • Anticholinesterases
  • Cytotoxic drugs

High Cholinesterase Levels

Seen in:

  • Obesity
  • Diabetes
  • Nephrotic syndrome
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Chronic alcoholism

High levels are less clinically significant.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + IFCC + Mayo + ARUP)

Values vary by method; typical adult ranges:

Men

  • 5,000 – 12,000 U/L

Women

  • 4,000 – 11,000 U/L

Pregnancy

  • Reduced (up to 40% lower)

(Direct katals depend on assay conditions; see conversion section.)

Summary Table

UnitMeaning
nkat/Lnanokatal per liter
µkat/Lmicrokatal per liter
nmol/(s·L)nanomole per second per liter
µmol/(s·L)micromole per second per liter
U/Lunit per liter (µmol/min/L)
IU/Lidentical to U/L
µmol/(min·L)micromole per minute per liter
µmol/(h·L)micromole per hour per liter
µmol/(h·mL)micromole per hour per milliliter

Diagnostic Uses

1. Organophosphate Poisoning

  • Diagnostic
  • Severity grading
  • Serial monitoring
  • RBC acetylcholinesterase may also be measured

2. Pre-anesthesia Screening

Identify pseudocholinesterase deficiency to avoid prolonged paralysis with succinylcholine.

3. Liver Function Assessment

Cholinesterase is a negative acute phase reactant & a marker of:

  • Synthetic liver function
  • Nutritional status

Low levels in:

  • Cirrhosis
  • Fulminant hepatitis
  • Severe malnutrition

4. Occupational Monitoring

Chronic exposure in:

  • Farmers
  • Pesticide workers
  • Industrial settings

5. Genetic Testing Adjunct

Dibucaine inhibition number:

  • Low → atypical enzyme
  • Normal → typical enzyme

Analytical Notes

  • Serum is the preferred sample
  • Hemolysis minimally affects results
  • Assay methods:
    • Colorimetric
    • Rate reaction analysis
    • IFCC standardized enzymatic protocols
  • Serial values more important than one reading
  • Avoid anticholinesterase drugs for accurate testing

Clinical Pearls

  • Markedly low cholinesterase strongly suggests organophosphate poisoning.
  • Pseudocholinesterase deficiency must be identified before anesthesia to prevent prolonged paralysis.
  • Cholinesterase is a better liver function marker than albumin in rapid-onset liver failure.
  • Normal cholinesterase does not rule out organophosphate poisoning; always check RBC acetylcholinesterase.

Interesting Fact

Cholinesterase was historically used to detect exposure to nerve agents (sarin, VX) because these agents irreversibly inhibit the enzyme — the same mechanism as organophosphate pesticides.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Enzymes.
  2. IFCC Enzyme Activity Standards.
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Cholinesterase.
  4. ARUP Consult - Toxicology & Pesticide Exposure.
  5. CDC Organophosphate Poisoning Clinical Guidelines.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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