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Quick Cholinesterase Test Overview in Anand

Also Known As Pseudocholinesterase Test, Butyrylcholinesterase, Plasma Cholinesterase, Serum Cholinesterase
Sample Type Blood (Serum or Plasma)
Fasting Required No
Report Delivery Within 24 hours
Age Group Adults
Gender All
Test Type Enzymatic Activity Assay
Units U/L or IU/L
1

The Cholinesterase test is a blood test that measures the activity of cholinesterase enzymes in the blood, which are responsible for breaking down acetylcholine, the primary neurotransmitter at neuromuscular junctions, autonomic ganglia, and certain central nervous system synapses. Two distinct cholinesterase enzymes are clinically measured. Acetylcholinesterase, also known as true cholinesterase or red cell cholinesterase, is found primarily in red blood cells and nerve tissue and is the enzyme directly responsible for terminating neuromuscular transmission at motor nerve endings. Pseudocholinesterase, also known as butyrylcholinesterase or plasma cholinesterase, is produced by the liver and circulates in the plasma, serving as a biomarker of hepatic synthetic function and as the enzyme that metabolises certain medications including succinylcholine and mivacurium used in anaesthesia. The inhibition of cholinesterase enzymes is the primary mechanism by which organophosphate and carbamate pesticides exert their toxicity. These compounds irreversibly or reversibly bind to and inhibit cholinesterase, preventing acetylcholine breakdown and causing its accumulation at synapses, resulting in the characteristic cholinergic toxidrome of excessive salivation, lacrimation, urination, defecation, gastrointestinal cramping, emesis, bronchospasm, bradycardia, miosis, muscle fasciculations, and in severe cases seizures, respiratory failure, and death. In India, organophosphate poisoning is one of the most common causes of acute poisoning-related mortality, driven by the widespread agricultural use of organophosphate pesticides and their accessibility in rural communities. Beyond toxicology, pseudocholinesterase measurement is clinically essential in the assessment of prolonged neuromuscular blockade following succinylcholine administration during anaesthesia, and as a sensitive marker of hepatic synthetic function in liver disease. The test is performed on a small blood sample drawn from a vein and completed in under five minutes.
2

Doctors prescribe a Cholinesterase test in the following situations: Diagnosing organophosphate and carbamate pesticide poisoning in patients presenting with cholinergic toxidrome symptoms including excessive secretions, miosis, bradycardia, bronchospasm, and muscle fasciculations where a significantly reduced cholinesterase activity confirms pesticide-induced enzyme inhibition and guides the urgency and intensity of atropine and pralidoxime antidotal therapy. Monitoring occupational pesticide exposure in agricultural workers, pest control operators, and pesticide manufacturing employees where serial cholinesterase measurements establish a pre-exposure baseline and detect early subclinical enzyme inhibition before symptomatic toxicity develops, enabling timely removal from exposure and medical evaluation. Investigating prolonged neuromuscular blockade after succinylcholine or mivacurium administration during general anaesthesia where an unusually prolonged paralysis that fails to resolve within the expected timeframe prompts pseudocholinesterase measurement to identify inherited pseudocholinesterase deficiency or acquired deficiency as the cause of delayed drug metabolism. Assessing hepatic synthetic function in patients with chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and acute liver failure where pseudocholinesterase is produced exclusively by the liver and its progressive decline reflects deteriorating hepatic synthetic capacity, contributing to overall liver function assessment alongside albumin, prothrombin time, and bilirubin. Pre-anaesthetic screening in patients with a personal or family history of prolonged response to succinylcholine where pseudocholinesterase activity measurement and dibucaine number testing identifies individuals with inherited enzyme variants that metabolise succinylcholine abnormally slowly, enabling selection of alternative neuromuscular blocking agents to prevent anaesthetic complications. Evaluating malnutrition and systemic illness where pseudocholinesterase falls in proportion to the severity of protein-energy malnutrition, nephrotic syndrome with protein loss, hyperthyroidism, and chronic debilitating illness, and where its measurement contributes to the overall nutritional and synthetic function assessment in these clinical contexts.
3

The Cholinesterase test measures the enzymatic activity of pseudocholinesterase in the blood serum or plasma, expressed in Units per litre (U/L) or International Units per litre (IU/L). Some laboratories additionally report red blood cell acetylcholinesterase activity, particularly in the context of organophosphate poisoning assessment. The normal reference range for serum pseudocholinesterase in adults is 3000 to 8000 U/L, with slight gender variation and values marginally higher in men. Normal (3000 to 8000 U/L) A result within the normal range indicates adequate cholinesterase activity with no significant enzyme inhibition or hepatic synthetic deficiency at the time of testing. In occupational monitoring programmes, a normal result relative to the individual's established pre-exposure baseline confirms no clinically significant pesticide-induced enzyme suppression during the monitoring period. Mildly to Moderately Reduced (Below 3000 U/L) A mildly to moderately reduced cholinesterase activity may indicate early organophosphate or carbamate exposure with partial enzyme inhibition, early or compensated liver disease with reduced synthetic function, malnutrition, or an inherited pseudocholinesterase variant. Clinical correlation with symptom assessment, exposure history, and liver function tests is essential for distinguishing between these causes and determining the appropriate management response. Markedly Reduced (Below 50 Percent of Normal) A markedly reduced cholinesterase activity below 50 percent of the normal range in the clinical context of pesticide exposure indicates significant enzyme inhibition consistent with moderate to severe organophosphate or carbamate poisoning requiring immediate medical management with atropine and pralidoxime. In the context of liver disease, severely reduced pseudocholinesterase indicates substantially impaired hepatic synthetic function and carries important prognostic significance regarding disease severity and transplant eligibility assessment.
4

No fasting is required for the Cholinesterase test, as food intake does not significantly affect cholinesterase enzyme activity in the blood. The test can be performed at any time of day and in acute organophosphate poisoning scenarios is performed immediately regardless of fasting status to provide the most timely diagnostic information for emergency management decisions. For occupational monitoring purposes, inform your doctor about all pesticide products you are regularly exposed to, the duration and intensity of exposure, and the type of personal protective equipment used. A baseline cholinesterase measurement taken before the agricultural or pesticide application season, before any known exposure, provides the most clinically meaningful reference point against which subsequent monitoring results can be compared to detect early enzyme inhibition. Inform your doctor about all medications currently being taken before the test, particularly succinylcholine, organophosphate-containing eye drops such as echothiophate, certain antibiotics, oral contraceptives, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors, as these can reduce pseudocholinesterase activity independently of pesticide exposure. If the test is being performed for pre-anaesthetic pseudocholinesterase deficiency assessment, inform your anaesthetist about any family history of prolonged anaesthetic paralysis as this guides the need for dibucaine number testing alongside activity measurement. Staying well hydrated before the blood draw facilitates easier venous access and a smooth collection experience.
5

If you are booking through the SecondMedic platform the Cholinesterase test price in Anand can cost you around Rs. 334. You may also consider booking a comprehensive liver function and toxicology panel that includes Cholinesterase alongside liver function tests, complete blood count, and renal function for a thorough assessment in the context of pesticide exposure or hepatic disease at a bundled price on SecondMedic.
6

SecondMedic offers convenient home sample collection for the Cholinesterase test in Anand, making it easy to get tested without visiting a diagnostic centre. Home collection is available free of charge for orders above Rs. 300. A trained phlebotomist will visit your preferred address between 7 AM and 10 PM, seven days a week, including Sundays and public holidays. Your blood sample is processed at NABL-accredited partner laboratories, and your report is delivered within 24 hours directly to your WhatsApp and email.

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People Also Ask

Yes, the Cholinesterase test is fully available in Anand through SecondMedic. You can book online and a trained phlebotomist will collect your sample at home at your preferred time.

The Cholinesterase test price in Anand on the SecondMedic platform is approximately Rs. 334. Prices may vary slightly based on the package selected at the time of booking.

Your Cholinesterase test report will be delivered within 24 hours of sample collection. Reports are shared directly to your WhatsApp and email for easy and immediate access.

Samples collected in Anand are processed at NABL-accredited partner laboratories. This ensures accuracy, reliability, and strict adherence to national diagnostic quality standards.

Yes, home sample collection for the Cholinesterase test is available in Anand. A certified phlebotomist will visit your address at a time slot that is most convenient for you.

Yes, home collection is available seven days a week in Anand, including Sundays and public holidays, between 7 AM and 10 PM without any additional charges.

Doctors prescribe this test to diagnose organophosphate and carbamate pesticide poisoning, monitor occupational pesticide exposure in agricultural workers, investigate prolonged anaesthetic paralysis after succinylcholine, assess hepatic synthetic function in liver disease, and screen for inherited pseudocholinesterase deficiency before anaesthesia.

The normal serum pseudocholinesterase range for adults is 3000 to 8000 U/L. Values below this range indicate enzyme inhibition from pesticide exposure, hepatic synthetic dysfunction, inherited deficiency, or other causes requiring clinical correlation and investigation.

A reduced cholinesterase activity indicates pesticide-induced enzyme inhibition, impaired hepatic synthetic function, inherited enzyme deficiency, or malnutrition depending on the clinical context. Your doctor will correlate the result with exposure history, symptoms, liver function tests, and anaesthetic history to determine the underlying cause and initiate appropriate clinical management.

Content Reviewed By

Reviewer
Reviewed by:

Dr. Kovid Pandey

MBBS, General Physician

Last Reviewed: 10th Mar 2026

References

1
Eddleston M et al.: Management of Acute Organophosphorus Pesticide Poisoning, Lancet, 2008 — doi.org
2
World Health Organization: The WHO Recommended Classification of Pesticides by Hazard, WHO Guidelines, 2019 — www.who.int
3
Soliday FK et al.: Pseudocholinesterase Deficiency: A Comprehensive Review of Genetic, Acquired, and Drug Influences, AANA Journal, 2010 — www.aana.com
4
Giannini EG et al.: Liver Enzyme Alteration: A Guide for Clinicians, Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2005 — doi.org
5
Indian Council of Medical Research: Standard Treatment Guidelines for Organophosphate Poisoning, ICMR Clinical Guidelines, 2016 — www.icmr.gov.in

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