Table of Contents
- Overview
- Results
- Risks
- Prevention
- Images
Trypsin and chymotrypsin are substances released from the pancreas during normal digestion. When the pancreas does not produce enough trypsin and chymotrypsin, smaller-than-normal amounts can be seen in a stool sample.
This article discusses the test to measure trypsin and chymotrypsin in stool.
Alternative Names
Stool - trypsin and chymotrypsin
How the test is performed
There are many ways to collect the samples. Your health care provider will tell you how to collect the stool.
You can catch the stool on plastic wrap that is loosely placed over the toilet bowl and held in place by the toilet seat. Then put the sample in a clean container. One type of test kit contains a special tissue that you use to collect the sample. Then you put the sample in a clean container.
Infants and young children:
For children wearing diapers, you can line the diaper with plastic wrap. The plastic wrap should be placed so that urine and stool do not mix.
A drop of stool is placed on a thin layer of gelatin. If trypsin or chymotrypsin are present, the gelatin will clear.
How to prepare for the test
Your health care provider will provide you with the supplies needed to collect the stool.
How the test will feel
Why the test is performed
These tests are simple ways of finding out whether you have a decrease in pancreas function. This is most often due to
These tests are most often done in young children who are thought to have
Note: This test is used as a screening tool for cystic fibrosis but it does not diagnose cystic fibrosis. Other tests are needed to confirm a diagnosis of cystic fibrosis.
Images
Review Date: 02/04/2011
Reviewed By: David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of
General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington
School of Medicine; and George F. Longstreth, MD, Department of
Gastroenterology, Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program San Diego,
California. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical
Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.
A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org)
