|
Albumin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Albumin (Latin: albus, white) refers generally to any protein with water solubility, which is moderately soluble in concentrated salt solutions, and experiences heat coagulation (protein denaturation...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albumin |
||
|
Explains how the albumin test is used, when an albumin test is ordered, and what the results of an albumin test might mean ... Formal name: Albumin...
|
||
|
Overview of the albumin blood test, used to screen for a liver disorder, kidney disease, or a nutritional deficiency ... To screen for a liver disorder or kidney disease or to evaluate nutritional status, especially in hospitalized patients, along with or instead of a prealbumin test ... Formal name: Albumin...
|
||
|
Serum albumin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
Human serum albumin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
High albumin concentrations in plasma ( ... Albumin is the most abundant serum protein. It has a molecular weight of 65,000 and consists of 584 amino acids and contains no carbohydrate. Albumin is produced exclusively in the liver and secreted directly into the circulation.
|
||
|
Because albumin is made by the liver, decreased serum albumin may be a sign of liver disease. It can also result from kidney disease, which allows albumin to escape into the urine. Decreased albumin may also be explained by malnutrition or a low protein diet...
|
||
|
Welcome to the Albumin Website ... This website will feature discoveries regarding serum albumin, the most prevalent protein of the blood plasma. ... It contains an updated list of published albumin mutations with references, accession numbers for nucleotide sequences, the list of registered cases of analbuminemia with...
|