Creatine Kinase (CK) – High-Yield Medical Notes

skeletal muscle

1. Definition

Creatine kinase (CK), also called creatine phosphokinase (CPK), is an intracellular enzyme that catalyzes the reversible conversion:Creatine+ATPPhosphocreatine+ADPCreatine + ATP \leftrightarrow Phosphocreatine + ADPCreatine+ATP↔Phosphocreatine+ADP

This reaction is crucial for energy storage and rapid regeneration of ATP, especially in muscle and brain tissues.


2. Location in Body

CK is present mainly in tissues with high energy demand:

TissueCK concentration
Skeletal muscleHighest
Cardiac muscleHigh
BrainModerate
Smooth muscleLow

Because CK is intracellular, serum CK rises when cell membrane damage occurs.


3. CK Isoenzymes

CK exists in three isoenzymes, formed by combinations of M (muscle) and B (brain) subunits.

IsoenzymeStructureMajor SourceClinical significance
CK-MMM + MSkeletal muscleMuscle injury, rhabdomyolysis
CK-MBM + BCardiac muscleMyocardial injury
CK-BBB + BBrain, smooth muscleCNS injury

Distribution

  • CK-MM: ~95–100% of total CK in normal serum
  • CK-MB: <5% normally
  • CK-BB: normally absent in serum

4. Normal Values

Normal ranges vary by lab.

Typical reference:

GroupCK (U/L)
Adult male50–200
Adult female40–150
ChildrenHigher than adults
NeonatesCan be very high after birth

5. Causes of Elevated CK

action of creatine kinase

A. Skeletal Muscle Disorders

Most common cause.

Examples:

  • Muscular dystrophy (e.g., Duchenne muscular dystrophy)
  • Inflammatory myopathies
    • Polymyositis
    • Dermatomyositis
  • Trauma
  • Intramuscular injections
  • Vigorous exercise

B. Rhabdomyolysis

Massive CK elevation.

Causes:

  • Crush injury
  • Drugs (statins)
  • Heat stroke
  • Severe infections

CK may rise >5000–10,000 U/L.

skeletal muscle

C. Cardiac Causes

CK-MB rises in myocardial injury.

Example:

  • Myocardial Infarction

However, CK-MB is now largely replaced by troponins.


D. Neurologic Disorders

CK-BB may increase in:

  • Stroke
  • Brain trauma
  • Seizures

Example:

  • Stroke

E. Other Causes

  • Hypothyroidism
  • Alcohol abuse
  • Surgery
  • Prolonged immobilization
  • Severe infections

6. CK in Myocardial Infarction

Historically important marker.

ParameterCK-MB
Rise3–6 hours
Peak12–24 hours
Normalization48–72 hours

Used previously to detect reinfarction.

Now replaced mainly by troponin I/T.


7. CK in Pediatric Practice

Important uses:

Screening for muscular dystrophy

Very high CK in:

  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy
  • Becker muscular dystrophy

Levels may be 10–100× normal.


Evaluation of Hypotonia

Used when evaluating:

  • floppy infant
  • muscle weakness

Evaluation of Rhabdomyolysis

Symptoms:

  • myalgia
  • weakness
  • dark urine (myoglobinuria)

8. Causes of Decreased CK

Rare clinical significance.

Seen in:

  • Low muscle mass
  • Chronic illness
  • Pregnancy

9. Drugs Causing Elevated CK

Important clinically.

Examples:

DrugMechanism
StatinsMyopathy
AntipsychoticsNeuroleptic malignant syndrome
CorticosteroidsMuscle breakdown

Example condition:
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome


10. Investigation Panel When CK is Elevated

TestPurpose
CK-MBCardiac source
TroponinMI confirmation
AST / ALTMuscle vs liver
LDHTissue injury
Serum myoglobinRhabdomyolysis
Urine myoglobinKidney injury

11. CK in Rhabdomyolysis Severity

CK levelInterpretation
<1000Mild
1000–5000Moderate

5000 | Severe muscle injury |
15000 | High risk of renal failure |


12. Clinical Pearls (Exam High-Yield)

  • CK-MM → skeletal muscle injury
  • CK-MB → cardiac muscle
  • CK-BB → brain
  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy → CK extremely high
  • CK rises after muscle trauma/exercise
  • CK-MB replaced by troponin in MI diagnosis

One-line exam memory tip

“CK rises with muscle damage — skeletal (MM), cardiac (MB), brain (BB).”

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