Biotin (Vitamin B7)
Test Summary
Sometimes the vitamin is used in weight reduction programs. It may be prescribed as a supplement for diabetic patients due to its role in carbohydrate metabolism. Biotin is commonly found in vitamin B complex and many food sources, such as milk, yeast, egg yolk, cereal, and mushrooms. The reference daily intake [RDI of 101.9(c) (8) (IV)] for vitamin B7 is 300 micrograms. Deficiency in the vitamin may result in seborrheic dermatitis, alopecia, myalgia, hyperesthesia, and conjunctivitis. Disorders of biotin metabolism can be acquired or congenital. Biotinidase and holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency are the two better known forms of disorders. The lack of biotin-dependent pyruvate carboxylase, propionyl-CoA carboxylase, methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase, and acetyl-CoA carboxylase can lead to the life-threatening disorder of multiple carboxylase deficiency. Treatment involves a daily dose of approximately 10 mg biotin/day. Irreversible mental or neurological abnormalities may result from delayed clinical intervention.
Aliases
- N/A
Specimen Collection
Special Instructions
Preferred Specimen
Minimum Volume
Instructions
Patient Preparation
Storage
Transport Temperature
Specimen Stability
- Room Temperature: Unacceptable
- Refrigerated: 7 Days
- Frozen: 14 Days
Limitations
Other Acceptable Specimens
Unacceptable Specimens
Order Code
EPIC (Premier) Code
Includes
CPT Code
- 84591
Billing Code
- 670755
CPT Statement
Methodology
FDA Status
Physician Attestation of Informed Consent
Testing Laboratory
1320 Soldiers Field Rd
Boston MA, 2135
Department
Reference Range
- Adult Normal: 221.0 – 3,004.0 pg/mL
- Pediatric Normal: 100.0 – 2,460.2 pg/mL
Setup Schedule / Expected Turnaround Time
Resources
Specimen Collection
Special Instructions
Preferred Specimen
Minimum Volume
Instructions
Patient Preparation
Storage
Transport Temperature
Specimen Stability
- Room Temperature: Unacceptable
- Refrigerated: 7 Days
- Frozen: 14 Days
Limitations
Other Acceptable Specimens
Unacceptable Specimens
Result Information
Methodology
Testing Laboratory
Reference Range
- Adult Normal: 221.0 – 3,004.0 pg/mL
- Pediatric Normal: 100.0 – 2,460.2 pg/mL