Test Name: CREATINE KINASE ISOENZYMES with TOTAL CK
Test Code: 2196491
Alias: 4451
CK Isoenzymes
CPK
LAB64
CPT Code(s): 82550   82552  
Test Includes: CK-BB, CK-MB, CK-MM and Creatine Kinase (CK), Total
Preferred Specimen: 2.0 mL serum
Container:

SST (gold)

Minimum Volume: 1.0 mL serum
Collection Instructions:

Allow specimen to completely clot (this can take up to 60 minutes). Centrifuge for 15 minutes as soon as the specimen is clotted. Transfer the serum into a properly labeled plastic transfer tube and freeze immediately. Specify specimen type (serum) on transfer tube.

Transport Temperature: Frozen
Stability:

Room temperature: unacceptable

Refrigerated:  48 hours

Frozen:  14 days

Rejection Criteria:

Hemolysis

Received thawed

Schedule: Set up: Mon-Sat; Report available 2-4 days
Method:

Electrophoresis

Enzymatic

Performing Lab: Quest Diagnostics, Wood Dale > SJC; #4451
Clinical Significance:

Creatine Kinase Isoenzymes (CK Isoenzymes) with Total CK - This test measures creatine kinase (CK), an enzyme found primarily in striated muscle and heart tissue, and may be useful in assessing muscle damage. Total CK and fractions of CK isoenzymes are reported.

 

CK is a dimeric enzyme composed of either 2 B subunits (CK-BB), 2 M subunits (CK-MM), or an M and a B subunit (CK-MB). CK-MM is the primary isoenzyme found in the skeletal muscle and heart tissue. CK-BB is mainly found in the brain and smooth muscle of gastrointestinal tract and urinary bladder. CK-MB is mainly found in the heart with a small amount in skeletal muscle.

 

An increase in the CK level is often observed in inflammatory myopathy (eg, viral myositis, polymyositis, and immune-mediated myopathies), muscular dystrophy (eg, Duchenne sex-linked muscular dystrophy), rhabdomyolysis, or malignant hyperthermia. In patients with neuromuscular disorders, an increased CK level may be the only initial manifestation. Other causes of elevated CK levels include hypothyroidism, direct muscle trauma (eg, surgery and intramuscular injection), excessive exercise, and certain medications (eg, statins, fibrates, antiretrovirals, and angiotensin II receptor antagonists).

 

The quantitation of CK-MB levels in serum was widely used to diagnose acute myocardial infarction but has been replaced by troponin I and T levels, which are more cardiac-specific. CK-MB measurement, preferably expressed as CK-MB relative to the total CK level, is only indicated in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome or reinfarction when troponin T and I testing are not available. In individuals with chronic muscle damage/disease or chronic renal failure, CK-MB may account for the elevation of CK levels owing to the phenomenon of "fetal reversion".

 

CK-BB levels may be increased in newborns with brain damage or very low birth weight, although healthy newborns can also have increased CK-BB levels as a result of birth-related muscle trauma.

 

The results of this test should be interpreted in the context of pertinent clinical and family history and physical examination findings.
Use:

Updated: 03/09/2026

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