Unit Converter
Myoglobin

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Early Marker of Muscle Injury - Rapidly Rising Cardiac Biomarker for MI & Rhabdomyolysis)

Synonyms

  • Myoglobin
  • Mb
  • Muscle hemoprotein
  • Oxygen-binding muscle protein
  • Cardiac & skeletal myoglobin

Units of Measurement

  • nmol/L
  • ng/mL
  • ng/dL
  • ng/100 mL
  • ng%
  • ng/L
  • µg/L

Molecular Weight

17,000 Da (17 kDa)

Key Unit Conversions

Mass ↔ Mass Equivalents

1\ \text{ng/mL} = 1\ \text{µg/L} = 1\ \text{ng%} = 1\ \text{ng/100 mL} 1 ng/mL=100 ng/dL1\ \text{ng/mL} = 100\ \text{ng/dL}1 ng/mL=100 ng/dL 1 ng/L=0.001 ng/mL1\ \text{ng/L} = 0.001\ \text{ng/mL}1 ng/L=0.001 ng/mL

Molar ↔ Mass

nmol/L=ng/mL17\text{nmol/L} = \frac{\text{ng/mL}}{17}nmol/L=17ng/mL​ ng/mL=nmol/L×17\text{ng/mL} = \text{nmol/L} \times 17ng/mL=nmol/L×17

Example:

  • 100 ng/mL ≈ 5.88 nmol/L

Description

Myoglobin is a hemoprotein found in cardiac and skeletal muscle.
It rapidly leaks into the bloodstream after muscle injury.

Properties:

  • Very early marker for myocardial infarction (MI)
  • Rises 2–3 hours after cardiac injury
  • Peaks at 6–9 hours
  • Returns to normal within 24–36 hours

However:

  • Not cardiac-specific
  • Elevated in any skeletal muscle damage

Therefore, myoglobin is used in combination with troponin.

Physiological Role

  • Stores oxygen in muscle
  • Facilitates oxygen diffusion during muscle contraction
  • Helps sustain energy during hypoxia
  • Released into circulation when muscle cell membranes are damaged

Clinical Significance

HIGH Myoglobin

1. Myocardial Infarction

Very early biomarker:

  • Rises in 2–3 hours
  • Peak: 6–9 hours
  • Normal by 24 hours
    Useful to rule out MI when normal at 4–6 hours.

2. Rhabdomyolysis

  • Trauma
  • Crush injury
  • Seizures
  • Prolonged immobilization
  • Statin toxicity
  • Snake bites
  • Alcohol/drug intoxication
  • Heat stroke

Risk of:

  • Acute kidney injury (AKI) due to myoglobinuria

3. Trauma / Muscle Injury

  • Burns
  • Electric shock
  • Vigorous exercise
  • Surgery (particularly ortho/vascular)

4. Renal Failure

Myoglobin is cleared by the kidneys - impaired clearance → high serum levels.

5. Inflammatory Myopathies

  • Polymyositis
  • Dermatomyositis
  • Muscular dystrophies

LOW Myoglobin

  • Not clinically significant
  • Seen rarely in muscle atrophy or chronic muscle wasting

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP + Cardiology guidelines)

Adults

  • Males: 19 – 92 ng/mL
  • Females: 12 – 76 ng/mL

(Equivalent: 19–92 µg/L, ~1.1–5.4 nmol/L)

Critical Levels

  • > 100 ng/mL → Consider cardiac or skeletal injury
  • > 300–500 ng/mL → Possible rhabdomyolysis
  • > 5000 ng/mL → High risk of acute kidney injury

Diagnostic Uses

1. Early Rule-Out of Myocardial Infarction

  • Very sensitive early
  • Low specificity
  • Used with troponin & CK-MB

2. Rhabdomyolysis Diagnosis

Myoglobin is one of the major markers along with:

  • CK
  • LDH
  • Serum/urine myoglobin
  • Potassium, phosphate (electrolyte abnormalities)

3. Acute Kidney Injury Risk Assessment

High serum myoglobin correlates with risk of:

  • Pigment nephropathy
  • AKI requiring dialysis

4. Trauma, Burns, Crush Injuries

Used to monitor muscle damage.

5. Drug & Toxin Monitoring

Elevated in:

  • Alcohol intoxication
  • Cocaine
  • Statins
  • Neuroleptics (NMS – neuroleptic malignant syndrome)

Analytical Notes

  • Assay: immunoassay (chemiluminescent, ELISA)
  • Interferences: hemolysis, lipemia
  • Very short half-life (~2 hours)
  • Renal impairment → falsely prolonged elevation
  • Always interpret with troponin for cardiac evaluation

Clinical Pearls

  • Normal myoglobin at 4 hours = MI very unlikely.
  • Myoglobinuria → dark red/brown urine; dipstick positive for blood with no RBCs.
  • Extremely high levels (>10,000 ng/mL) strongly predict acute kidney injury.
  • Troponin has replaced myoglobin for diagnosis of MI, but myoglobin remains useful for early exclusion.
  • Myoglobin rises faster than CK or troponin in trauma, seizures, and statin myopathy.

Interesting Fact

Myoglobin was the first protein whose 3D structure was solved (by John Kendrew, Nobel Prize 1962), making it a landmark molecule in modern biochemistry.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Muscle & Cardiac Markers
  2. AHA/ACC Guidelines - Cardiac Biomarkers
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Myoglobin
  4. ARUP Consult - Rhabdomyolysis & Cardiac Biomarkers
  5. Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies - Rhabdomyolysis
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - Myoglobin Test

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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