Test Overview
A lactic acid test is a blood test that measures the level of
lactic acid made in the body. Most of it is made by muscle tissue and
red blood cells. When the oxygen level in the body is normal, carbohydrate breaks down into water and carbon
dioxide. When the oxygen level is low, carbohydrate breaks down for energy and make lactic acid.
Lactic acid levels get higher when strenuous exercise or other
conditions—such as
heart failure, a severe infection (sepsis), or
shock—lower the flow of blood and oxygen
throughout the body. Lactic acid levels can also get higher when the liver is
severely damaged or diseased, because the liver normally breaks down lactic
acid.
Very high levels of lactic acid cause a serious, sometimes
life-threatening condition called lactic acidosis. Lactic acidosis can also
occur in a person who takes metformin (Glucophage) to control
diabetes when heart or kidney failure or a severe
infection is also present.
A lactic acid test is generally done on a blood sample taken from a
vein in the arm but it may also be done on a sample of blood taken from an artery (arterial blood gas).