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Creatine Kinase MB (CK-MB)
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Creatine Kinase MB (CK-MB)
Also known as: CK-MB Mass, Creatine Kinase MB
COMMON RANGE
0 – 7.7
ng/mL
0
11.4
A
ARUP Laboratories
Adult Male
↗
See all sources ↓
CONVERT & COMPARE
ng/mL
=
3.9
µg/L
=
3.9
mcg/L
=
3.9
ug/L
Reference ranges across 10+ sources
Adult reference ranges from 5 entries across 3 named sources, shown in ng/mL. Compare side-by-side.
SOURCE
SEX
AGE
RANGE
VISUAL
CITE
A
ARUP Laboratories
Male
≥18y
0 – 7.7 ng/mL
↗
A
ARUP Laboratories
Female
≥18y
0 – 4.3 ng/mL
↗
L
Labcorp
Male
≥18y
0 – 10.4 ng/mL
↗
L
Labcorp
Female
≥18y
0 – 5.3 ng/mL
↗
Q
Quest Diagnostics
All
≥18y
0 – 5 ng/mL
↗
A
ARUP Laboratories
Male · ≥18y
↗
0 – 7.7 ng/mL
A
ARUP Laboratories
Female · ≥18y
↗
0 – 4.3 ng/mL
L
Labcorp
Male · ≥18y
↗
0 – 10.4 ng/mL
L
Labcorp
Female · ≥18y
↗
0 – 5.3 ng/mL
Q
Quest Diagnostics
All · ≥18y
↗
0 – 5 ng/mL
About Creatine Kinase MB (CK-MB)
This test measures the amount of creatine kinase (CK) in a sample of your blood. CK is also called creatine phosphokinase (CPK).
CK is an enzyme. An enzyme is a protein that speeds up certain chemical reactions in your body. CK helps make energy. Most of the CK in your body is in your skeletal muscles. These are the muscles you use to move. You also have CK in your heart muscle and small amounts in your brain. CK exists as different forms made of two subunits: CK-MM is found mostly in skeletal muscle, CK-MB mostly in heart muscle, and CK-BB mostly in brain tissue.
Normally, a small amount of CK gets into your blood from the usual wear and tear on your muscles. But if your muscles, heart, or brain tissues are damaged, larger amounts of CK leak out of your cells into your bloodstream.
A CK test is mainly used to help diagnose and monitor injuries and diseases that damage skeletal muscles and cause high levels of CK in your blood. But it may also be used for conditions that damage the heart muscle and the brain.
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
Useful for
Help diagnose muscle injuries, including injuries from accidents, serious burns, or extreme exercise.
Help diagnose muscle diseases, including muscular dystrophy, rhabdomyolysis, and myositis.
In certain cases, a CK test may be used to help diagnose a heart attack. But other tests, especially troponin tests, are usually preferred because they are better at finding heart damage.
If you've had a stroke, a CK test may be done to find out how severe it was. The test may also help predict the chance that you may have another stroke.
If the source of high or increasing CK levels isn't clear, you may need a more specific type of CK test (a CK isoenzymes test) to find out if the CK is coming from your muscles, heart, or brain.
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
Interpretation
If your CK level is higher than normal, it usually means you have some type of muscle damage. CK levels may not reach their highest until up to two days after certain injuries. So, you may have more than one CK test to see if your levels go up or down. CK levels that stay high or increase may mean that muscle damage is continuing to happen.
But a CK test result can't show where the damage is or what's causing it. Your provider will consider your symptoms and medical history to understand what your test results mean.
If the source of high or increasing CK levels isn't clear, you may need a more specific type of CK test to find out if the CK is coming from your muscles, heart, or brain. The CK-MB isoenzyme is found mostly in heart muscle, so a CK-MB result can help check whether high CK levels are from heart damage.
For general wellness information only. Talk to a clinician about your specific results.
Main source: MedlinePlus ↗
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Often tested alongside creatine kinase mb (ck-mb) or part of the same panel.
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Other
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Other
CA-125
Other
CA 19-9
Other
Sources
A
ARUP Laboratories
L
Labcorp
Q
Quest Diagnostics
Last updated 2026-05-02
This page aggregates publicly available reference data and clinical information from Mayo Clinic Laboratories and other sources. For general wellness information only — not medical advice. For diagnosis or treatment of any condition, talk to a qualified clinician.
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