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Reference Range
Vitamin K is an essential, lipid-soluble vitamin that plays a vital role in the production of coagulation proteins. The reference range of vitamin K is 0.2-3.2 ng/mL, but impaired blood clotting has been associated with levels below 0.5 ng/mL by one source.[1] Another source cites a reference range of 0.10-2.2 ng/mL.[2]

Interpretation
Conditions associated with vitamin K deficiency include the following:[3] Hemorrhagic disease of newborn Unexpected or excessive bleeding Osteoporosis (conflicting data[4] ) Conditions that may lead to vitamin K deficiency include the following: [5, 3] Chronic illness Malnutrition Alcoholism Multiple abdominal surgeries Long-term parenteral nutrition Malabsorption (cystic fibrosis, inflammatory bowel disease, cholestatic disease [biliary obstruction, primary biliary cirrhosis], celiac disease, chronic pancreatitis) Parenchymal liver disease Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) Polycythemia vera Nephrotic syndrome Leukemia Conditions associated with excessive vitamin K include the following:[1] Neonatal jaundice (with menadione [vitamin K3]) Hemolytic anemia (with menadione [vitamin K3]) Hyperbilirubinemia (with menadione [vitamin K3]) Blockage of oral anticoagulants

Collection and Panels


Specifics for collection and panels are as follows:[2, 6] Specimen type: Blood serum or plasma Container: Vacutainer, plain red-top (serum) or lavender-top EDTA (plasma) Collection method: Venipuncture Specimen volume: 2 mL Rejected for hemolysis Other instructions are as follows: Spin down and submit frozen in amber vial Fasting specimen No alcohol consumption for 24 hours before collection The following are related tests: Prothrombin time (PT) Activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) Thrombin time Platelet count Platelet function tests Coagulation factors Fibrinogen D-dimer

Background
Description
Vitamin K is an essential, lipid-soluble vitamin that plays a vital role in the production of coagulation proteins. There are 3 forms of vitamin K. Vitamin K1 (phylloquinone) is the natural form found in green leafy vegetables, green tea, and oils such as soybean, cottonseed, canola, and olive oil.[7] It is also the commercially available synthetic form used for treatment today. Vitamin K2 (menaquinone) is produced by colonic bacteria. Vitamin K3 (menadione) was a commercially available water-soluble form, it is no longer available for use in humans because of toxicity.[1] Vitamin K serves as a cofactor in the carboxylation of certain glutamic acid residues on precursor coagulation proteins. The carboxylation enables binding of these proteins to surface phospholipids to start the normal antithrombotic process. Osteocalcin, which is secreted by osteoblasts and plays a role in bone formation, undergoes vitamin Kdependent carboxylation in a similar fashion.[4] Vitamin K deficiency may affect any age group but is encountered most often in infancy. Infants with vitamin K deficiencywhich may be caused by the limited transplacental transfer of vitamin K, the low level of vitamin K in breast milk, limited neonatal liver vitamin K storage, and low neonatal colonic bacterial colonizationare at risk for hemorrhagic disease of newborn. Newborns in the United States, Canada, and Great Britain are routinely given vitamin K to prevent this. [4] Vitamin K toxicity is typically associated with formula or synthetic vitamin K3 (menadione) injections. Because of its toxicity, menadione is no longer used for treatment of vitamin K deficiency. [4]

Indications/Applications
Measurement of vitamin K is unusual because the level responds to dietary changes within 24 hours, but effects on the vitamin Kdependent proteins are delayed. If vitamin K deficiency is suspected in a patient with unexpected or excessive bleeding, PT is the main laboratory test indicated. If the PT is prolonged in such a patient, vitamin K is often administered. Cessation of bleeding and normalization of the PT after vitamin K administration is presumptive evidence of vitamin K deficiency. [1]

Considerations
Drugs that may cause vitamin K deficiency include the following:[1] Antibiotics (cephalosporins) Warfarin Salicylates Anticonvulsants Sulfa drugs High doses of vitamins A and E Bile acid sequestrants (cholestyramine, colestipol), mineral oils, and orlistat weight-loss medication (may decrease absorption of vitamin K)

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