Cardiac

BNP Test

Also known as: B-Type Natriuretic Peptide, Brain Natriuretic Peptide

What is BNP?

BNP is a hormone released by the heart in response to increased pressure and stretching. It helps regulate fluid balance and blood pressure.[MedlinePlus (NIH)]

What This Test Measures

This test measures BNP levels to help diagnose heart failure and assess its severity.[Cleveland Clinic]

Why It's Important

Who Should Get This Test?

BNP testing helps diagnose and monitor heart failure.

Risk Factors

  • Shortness of breath of unclear cause
  • Suspected heart failure
  • Monitoring known heart failure
  • Swelling in legs or abdomen (edema)
  • Unexplained fatigue with exertion
  • Prior to major surgery in high-risk patients
  • Evaluating prognosis in heart failure
  • Guiding heart failure therapy adjustments

Screening Schedule

Not for routine screening; ordered when heart failure is suspected or to monitor established heart failure.

Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

What Happens During the Test

Blood Test

A blood sample is drawn from a vein. BNP is measured using immunoassay. No fasting required. NT-proBNP is a related test often used interchangeably.

Duration

5-10 minutes for blood draw; results often available within hours

Discomfort Level

Minimal discomfort from needle insertion

Source: Cleveland Clinic

Risks & Side Effects

Minimal Risk

Standard blood draw with minimal risks.

  • Brief pain at needle site
  • Small bruise may develop
  • Rare: lightheadedness
  • Very rare: infection at puncture site
Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

Normal Range

Less than 100 pg/mL makes heart failure unlikely.

Note: Levels increase with age and are higher in women and people with kidney disease.

Source: Cleveland Clinic

Unit Conversion

Convert between pg/mL and ng/L

pg/mL and ng/L are equivalent (1 pg/mL = 1 ng/L)
pg/mLng/L
5050
100100
300300
500500
10001000
Source: MedlinePlus (NIH)

High Values

High BNP suggests heart failure. Levels above 400 pg/mL strongly indicate heart failure. Also elevated in kidney failure, pulmonary embolism, and sepsis.[American Heart Association]

Low Values

Low or normal BNP makes heart failure unlikely as the cause of symptoms.[MedlinePlus (NIH)]

Test Limitations & Accuracy

BNP interpretation requires clinical context:

  • Levels increase with age even in healthy individuals
  • Kidney disease elevates BNP (reduced clearance)
  • Obesity can lower BNP levels despite heart failure
  • Atrial fibrillation elevates BNP
  • Pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary embolism elevate BNP
  • BNP and NT-proBNP have different reference ranges and are not interchangeable
  • "Gray zone" values (100-400 pg/mL) require clinical judgment
Source: American Heart Association

Alternative & Complementary Tests

BNP is used with other cardiac assessments:

NT-proBNP

Alternative natriuretic peptide test; longer half-life, used similarly to BNP

Echocardiogram

Imaging to visualize heart structure and function

To assess heart muscle damage

Chest X-ray

To assess lung congestion and heart size

EKG/ECG

To assess heart rhythm and electrical activity

Source: Cleveland Clinic

References

  1. 1.BNP TestMedlinePlus (NIH)
  2. 2.BNP TestCleveland Clinic

Medical Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider for interpretation of test results and medical decisions.

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