Albumin is the most abundant plasma protein, synthesized by the liver. It plays a major role in maintaining oncotic pressure and transporting various substances in blood.
1️⃣ Maintenance of Oncotic (Colloid Osmotic) Pressure
Contributes about 75–80% of plasma oncotic pressure
Prevents fluid leakage from blood vessels into tissues
🔎 Clinical significance:
↓ Albumin → Edema
Severe ↓ → Ascites
Seen in liver disease, nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition
2️⃣ Indicator of Liver Function
Albumin is synthesized exclusively in the liver.
🔹 ↓ Albumin suggests:
Chronic liver disease (cirrhosis)
Severe hepatitis
Liver failure
⚠ It reflects chronic liver dysfunction (because albumin has a long half-life ~20 days).
3️⃣ Nutritional Status Marker
Low albumin may indicate:
Protein-energy malnutrition
Kwashiorkor
Malabsorption syndromes
It is often used to assess:
Preoperative nutritional risk
Chronic illness status
4️⃣ Renal Disease Indicator
In conditions like nephrotic syndrome:
Albumin is lost in urine (proteinuria)
Leads to hypoalbuminemia and edema
5️⃣ Transport Function
Albumin transports:
Bilirubin
Fatty acids
Calcium
Hormones (thyroid, steroid hormones)
Many drugs
🔎 Low albumin can alter drug binding → ↑ free drug levels → toxicity risk.
6️⃣ Inflammatory Marker
Albumin is a negative acute phase reactant.
↓ in:
Chronic infections
Trauma
Burns
Malignancy
7️⃣ Hyperalbuminemia
Rare and usually due to:
Dehydration
Hemoconcentration
Summary Table :
Condition Albumin Level
Liver cirrhosis ↓
Nephrotic syndrome ↓
Malnutrition ↓
Burns ↓
Dehydration ↑
Normal Serum Albumin Level:
3.5 – 5.0 g/dL