Abstract
The diagnostic usefulness of fasting total serum bile acids (SBA/F) in the detection of liver diseases and assessment of different aspects of hepatic function alteration was evaluated in 61 healthy subjects and 186 patients with liver disease. The value of SBA/F was compared with other routine tests. In 49 healthy subjects and 92 patients, serum bile acids were also measured after the im administration of Ceruletide as a cholecystokinetic agent (SBA/C).
The diagnostic efficacy for the detection of disease states was better with aspartate-aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) and alanine-aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.2) than with SBA/F. When SBA/C was also determined the diagnostic efficacy was not substantially better than the SBA/F test.
In the assessment of hepatocellular necrosis SBA/F showed a higher rate of misclassification errors compared to alanine-aminotransferase (mean error 45% vs 17%), whereas SBA/F gave similar results with direct bilirubin and pseudocholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.8) in the evaluation of cholestasis (mean error 40% vs 41%) and impaired biosynthesis (mean error 39% vs 40%), respectively.
Serum bile acid determination did not show any significant diagnostic advantage with respect to the other routine liver tests.
