Abstract
Background: Bile acids (BA) are found predominantly in bile but also in serum, where they can be used as markers for inborn and acquired hepatobiliary disorders. We measured serum BA levels by mass spectrometry to determine reference ranges for healthy children and adolescents in different age groups.
Methods: In 194 healthy children and adolescents (0–19 years) concentrations of serum BA and BA composition were determined using high-performance liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry. Individuals were classified by ages into five groups: 0–5 months, 6–24 months, 3–5 years, 6–11 years, and >11 years.
Results: The 95% confidence interval of serum total BA values in newborns was 3.85–6.32 μmol/L. In the cohort aged 6–24 months total BA values were significantly higher (6.61–9.43 μmol/L; p<0.001). During growth, values decreased (6–11 years; 3.61–5.41 μmol/L), and after 11 years (3.09–4.12 μmol/L) resembled those in adults (0.28–6.50 μmol/L). With respect to conjugation patterns, in neonates BA were primarily conjugated with taurine; however, after 6 months glycine conjugates clearly predominated.
Conclusions: Our data show that serum BA values vary substantially during the first years of life and that reference ranges for BA are age-dependent. The physiologic mechanisms underlying these variations remain to be determined.
Acknowledgments
The excellent technical assistance of Maria Schäffer is gratefully acknowledged. We thank A.S. Knisely, Institute of Liver Studies, King’s College Hospital, London, UK, for helpful comments on the manuscript.
Author contributions: All the authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this submitted manuscript and approved submission.
Financial support: None declared.
Employment or leadership: None declared.
Honorarium: J. Jahnel has received a grant.
Competing interests: The funding organization(s) played no role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; or in the decision to submit the report for publication.
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©2015 by De Gruyter
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- EFLM Opinion Paper
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- General Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
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- A study examining the bias of albumin and albumin/creatinine ratio measurements in urine
- National survey on appropriateness of clinical biochemistry reporting in China
- Potentiometric measurement of urinary iodine concentration in patients with thyroid diseases with and without previous exposure to non-radioactive iodine
- Determination of 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies: inter-laboratory concordance in the Euradrenal International Serum Exchange Program
- Value of a commercial kit for detecting anti-C1q autoantibodies and correlation with immunological and clinical activity of lupus nephritis
- Comparison of the bead-based simultaneous analysis of specific platelet antibodies assay (SASPA) and Pak Lx Luminex technology with the monoclonal antibody immobilization of platelet antigens assay (MAIPA) to detect platelet alloantibodies
- Measurement of the inflammatory response in the early postoperative period after hip and knee arthroplasty
- Whole blood thromboelastometry profiles in women with preeclampsia
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- Infectious Diseases
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- Cardiovascular Diseases
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- Cuvette carryover with the gentamicin assay on the Beckman AU480 analyser
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- Reply to: The risk of macrovascular complications in subjects genotyped for common IL-6 gene and TNF-α gene variants
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