OSHA Zinc Protoporphyrin




Test Mnemonic

OSHALZ

CPT Codes

  • 83655 - QTY (1)
  • 84202 - QTY (1)

Aliases

  • Industrial Zinc Protoporphyrin
  • ZPOSHA

Includes

  • Zinc Protoporphyrin, Whole Blood
  • Zinc Protoporphyrin to Heme Ratio
  • Lead, Whole Blood

Performing Laboratory

ARUP

FDA Category

Analyte Specific Reagent


Specimen Requirements

Volume Type Container Collect Temperature Transport Temperature Special Instructions
1 mLWhole bloodEDTA (Navy Blue) RefrigeratedTHIS TEST REQUIRES TWO SPECIMEN TUBES. Collect 1 ml whole blood in each of 2 EDTA navy tubes.

Alternate Specimen Requirements

Volume Type Container Collect Temperature Transport Temperature Special Instructions
1 mLWhole bloodEDTA (Lavender) RefrigeratedTHIS TEST REQUIRES TWO SPECIMEN TUBES. Collect 1 ml whole blood in each of 2 EDTA navy tubes.

Minimum Specimen Requirements

Volume Type Container Collect Temperature Transport Temperature Special Instructions
0.5 mL    0.5 ml whole blood in each of 2 EDTA tubes.

Stability

Environmental Condition Description
Ambient30 hours
Refrigerated5 weeks
FrozenUnacceptable

Days Performed

Mon - Fri

Turnaround Time

2 - 5 days

Methodology

Name Description
ICP/Mass Spectrometry 
Quantitative hematofluorometry 

Reference Range

Lead
Sex Age From Age To Type Range Range Unit
   Years99 YearsNormal<3.5ug/dL
   Years99 YearsUrgent> 44.9ug/dL
ZPP to heme ratio
Sex Age From Age To Type Range Range Unit
   Years99 YearsNormal0 - 69umol ZPP/mol heme
ZPP, whole blood
Sex Age From Age To Type Range Range Unit
   Years99 YearsNormal0 - 40ug/dL

Special Info

Submit Heavy Metals requisition with specimen. Provide all required demographics to meet State Health Department requirements. Lead testing performed in house at Cleveland Clinic Laboratories.

Clinical Info

For occupational exposure to lead, OSHA requires ZPP whole blood concentration to be reported in units of ug/dL. For adults, conversion of ZPP to units of ug/dL assumes a hematocrit of 45%. Elevated ZPP results are seen in early and late iron deficiency, the anemia of chronic disease, chronic lead poisoning, and erythropoietic protoporphyria. Elevated bilirubin or riboflavin and hemolyzed, clotted, or improperly aliquoted specimens may falsely increase the ZPP concentration.