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Vitamin K (Phylloquinone)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Essential Fat-Soluble Vitamin - Required for Coagulation, Bone Health & Vascular Physiology)

Synonyms

  • Phylloquinone
  • Vitamin K1
  • K vitamin
  • Anti-hemorrhagic vitamin
  • 2-methyl-3-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone
  • Part of the Vitamin K family (K1, K2 forms)

Note: Vitamin K1 = phylloquinone; Vitamin K2 = menaquinones (MK-4, MK-7), not measured routinely.

Units of Measurement

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

Unit Conversions

Molecular Weight of Phylloquinone = 450.7 g/mol

nmol/L ↔ µg/L

1 nmol/L=0.451 µg/L1\ \text{nmol/L} = 0.451\ \text{µg/L}1 nmol/L=0.451 µg/L 1 µg/L=2.21 nmol/L1\ \text{µg/L} = 2.21\ \text{nmol/L}1 µg/L=2.21 nmol/L

µg/dL → µg/L

1 µg/dL=10 µg/L1\ \text{µg/dL} = 10\ \text{µg/L}1 µg/dL=10 µg/L

ng/mL → µg/L

1 ng/mL=1 µg/L1\ \text{ng/mL} = 1\ \text{µg/L}1 ng/mL=1 µg/L

µg/100 mL = µg% = µg/dL

Descrip tion

Vitamin K is a fat-soluble vitamin required for activation of several proteins involved in:

Coagulation

Vitamin K is the cofactor for γ-glutamyl carboxylase, which activates:

  • Factors II, VII, IX, X
  • Protein C
  • Protein S
  • Protein Z

Bone & Vascular Health

Carboxylates:

  • Osteocalcin (bone mineral binding)
  • Matrix Gla-protein (MGP) (prevents vascular calcification)

Phylloquinone (Vitamin K1)

Primary dietary form from green leafy vegetables.
Absorbed with fat; requires bile & pancreatic enzymes.

Why Vitamin K is tested

Used to investigate:

  • Coagulopathy
  • Malabsorption
  • Warfarin therapy effects (indirect)
  • Newborn hemorrhagic disease
  • Liver disease contexts

Physiological Role

1. Activation of Clotting Proteins

Carboxylation converts inactive precursors → active coagulation factors.

2. Bone Formation

Vitamin K–dependent osteocalcin ensures proper bone mineralization.

3. Prevention of Vascular Calcification

Matrix Gla-protein (MGP) requires vitamin K for activation.

4. Antioxidant & Cellular Functions

Vitamin K participates in sphingolipid metabolism and anti-inflammatory pathways.

Clinical Significance

LOW VITAMIN K

Most common and clinically important.

Causes

  • Malabsorption (cholestasis, CF, IBD, celiac disease, biliary obstruction)
  • Long-term antibiotics (destroys gut bacteria)
  • Warfarin therapy (vitamin K antagonist)
  • Liver disease (decreased clotting factor synthesis)
  • Newborns (low stores + sterile gut → risk for VKDB)
  • Poor diet
  • Pancreatic insufficiency

Symptoms

  • Easy bruising
  • Mucosal bleeding
  • GI bleeding
  • Hematuria
  • Intracranial hemorrhage (infants)
  • Prolonged PT/INR

HIGH VITAMIN K

Rare and usually due to supplements.

High intake is not toxic, but:

  • May antagonize warfarin effect
  • Very high doses of synthetic vitamin K3 (menadione, not used clinically) are hepatotoxic

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E • ARUP • Mayo • NIH)

Serum Phylloquinone (Vitamin K1)

  • 0.15 – 1.5 ng/mL
    (= 0.15 – 1.5 µg/L)
    (= 0.33 – 3.3 nmol/L)

Deficiency

  • <0.15 ng/mL
    or
  • Elevated PT/INR despite adequate liver function

Newborns

Levels are low at birth → routine vitamin K prophylaxis recommended globally.

Diagnostic Uses

1. Evaluation of Bleeding Disorders

Especially with:

  • Prolonged PT
  • Normal aPTT
  • Normal fibrinogen
    Suggests vitamin K deficiency or early warfarin effect.

2. Assessment of Fat-Malabsorption

Cholestasis, CF, biliary disease.

3. Monitoring in Warfarin Therapy

Not measured directly, but deficiency influences INR.

4. Newborn Screening / Hemorrhagic Disease of the Newborn (VKDB)

5. Liver Disease Workup

6. Bone Metabolism Research

(Vitamin K’s role in osteocalcin carboxylation)

Analytical Notes

  • Fasting sample recommended (post meal ↑ levels).
  • Protect from light (phylloquinone degrades).
  • LC-MS/MS is gold standard.
  • Serum levels fluctuate with diet and lipoproteins; interpret with lipid profile if needed.
  • PT/INR often a more clinically relevant functional indicator.

Clinical Pearls

  • Warfarin inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase, preventing recycling of active vitamin K.
  • In cholestasis, deficiency occurs even with dietary adequacy → consider parenteral vitamin K.
  • Vitamin K deficiency → prolonged PT earlier than aPTT.
  • Breast-fed infants must receive vitamin K prophylaxis to prevent VKDB.
  • Vitamin K2 (menaquinone) has longer half-life and more potent effects on bone, but Vitamin K1 is standard test analyte.

Interesting Fact

Vitamin K’s name comes from the German “Koagulations-Vitamin”, discovered in 1935 for its essential role in preventing hemorrhage.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Fat-Soluble Vitamins
  2. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements - Vitamin K
  3. WHO - Vitamin K prophylaxis guidelines
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Phylloquinone
  5. ARUP Consult - Vitamin K Testing
  6. British Society for Haematology (BSH) - Coagulation Guidelines

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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