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Catalog ID FecK Potassium, Fecal

Additional Codes

CPOE: Ref Potassium, Fecal

DOE: Ref F Pot

Specimen

5 grams (1 gram minimum) stool in unpreserved stool transport vial, refrigerated

DO NOT ADD ANY LIQUIDS TO SPECIMEN - will alter the results

Rejection Criteria

Formed stool, greasy stool, insufficient quantity, unlabelled specimen, specimen at room temperature >1 hour

Interpretative Information

The concentration of electrolytes in fecal water and their rate of excretion are dependent upon 3 factors:

-Normal daily dietary intake of electrolytes

-Passive transport from serum and other vascular spaces to equilibrate fecal osmotic pressure with vascular osmotic pressure

-Electrolyte transport into fecal water due to exogenous substances and rare toxins (eg, cholera toxin)

Fecal osmolality is normally in equilibrium with vascular osmolality, and sodium is the major effector of this equilibrium. Fecal osmolality is normally 2 x (sodium + potassium) unless there are exogenous factors inducing a change in composition, such as the presence of other osmotic agents (magnesium sulfate, saccharides) or drugs inducing secretions, such as phenolphthalein or bisacodyl.

Osmotic diarrhea is caused by ingestion of poorly absorbed ions or sugars. There are multiple potential causes of osmotic diarrhea. Measurement of phosphate and/or magnesium in liquid stool can assist in identifying intentional or inadvertent use of magnesium and/or phosphate containing laxatives as the cause. The other causes of osmotic diarrhea include ingestion of osmotic agents such as sorbitol or polyethylene glycol laxatives, or carbohydrate malabsorption due most commonly to lactose intolerance. Carbohydrate malabsorption can be differentiated from other osmotic causes by a low stool pH (<6).

Performing Lab

ARUP Laboratories

Turn-Around-Time

1-2 days from ARUP Laboratories specimen receipt

Reference Values

A reference interval has not been established for fecal specimens.