Metabolic Panel (BMP and CMP): What Each Value Means

Revisado por AskAnything Clinical Team, MD-reviewedÚltima actualización 2026-04-26

The metabolic panel is the second most-ordered blood test in medicine after the CBC. It comes in two forms: the basic metabolic panel (BMP, 7–8 tests) and the comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP, 14 tests). The CMP is the BMP plus liver enzymes and protein measurements.

Like the CBC, the metabolic panel reports a long list of values — most of them flagged in red on patient portals when they drift even slightly. The skill is reading the panel as a coherent picture: which values move together, which are independent, and which abnormalities are usually noise versus genuinely meaningful.

What the metabolic panel includes

Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP):

  • Sodium — fluid balance, neurologic function.
  • Potassium — cardiac and muscle function; tightly regulated.
  • Chloride — fluid and acid-base balance.
  • Bicarbonate (CO₂) — acid-base balance.
  • Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) — protein metabolism waste; kidney clearance.
  • Creatinine — kidney filtration (with eGFR calculated).
  • Glucose — fasting or random.
  • Calcium — sometimes included in BMP, always in CMP.

Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) adds:

  • Total protein, albumin — synthetic liver function and nutritional status.
  • Bilirubin (total) — liver excretory function and hemolysis.
  • Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) — liver/bile and bone.
  • AST and ALT — liver injury markers.

The CMP costs about the same as a BMP at most labs and is the more useful panel in routine bloodwork.

Metabolic panel reference ranges

Grupo demográficoBajoAltoUnidad
Sodium136145mEq/L
Potassium3.55mEq/L
BUN720mg/dL
Glucose (fasting)7099mg/dL
Calcium8.610.3mg/dL
Albumin3.55g/dL
ALT (newer cutoff, men)033U/L

Typical adult ranges (ranges vary slightly by lab and assay):

  • Sodium: 136–145 mEq/L
  • Potassium: 3.5–5.0 mEq/L
  • Chloride: 98–107 mEq/L
  • Bicarbonate (CO₂): 22–29 mEq/L
  • BUN: 7–20 mg/dL
  • Creatinine: 0.59–1.35 mg/dL (sex-dependent)
  • eGFR: >60 mL/min/1.73m² is normal
  • Glucose (fasting): 70–99 mg/dL
  • Calcium: 8.6–10.3 mg/dL
  • Total protein: 6.0–8.3 g/dL
  • Albumin: 3.5–5.0 g/dL
  • Bilirubin (total): 0.1–1.2 mg/dL
  • ALP: 44–147 U/L
  • AST: 8–48 U/L
  • ALT: 7–55 U/L (lab); 7–33 men, 7–25 women (newer healthier-population cutoffs)

How to read patterns on a metabolic panel

A handful of patterns drive most clinical decisions:

  • BUN/Creatinine ratio above 20 + low bicarbonate → dehydration or prerenal kidney injury.
  • BUN and creatinine both elevated, eGFR below 60 sustained → chronic kidney disease.
  • High glucose on a fasting sample → impaired fasting glucose (100–125) or diabetes (≥126, confirmed).
  • Low sodium (below 135) → typically dilutional (heart failure, kidney/liver disease, SIADH); rarely true sodium loss.
  • High sodium (above 145) → almost always volume depletion or inadequate water intake.
  • High potassium (above 5.0) → kidney disease, ACE inhibitors, ARBs, spironolactone, hemolyzed sample (most common cause of mildly elevated values), rhabdomyolysis.
  • Low potassium (below 3.5) → diuretics, GI losses, refeeding.
  • Low bicarbonate with elevated anion gap → metabolic acidosis (DKA, lactic acidosis, kidney failure, certain ingestions).
  • High calcium (above 10.5) → hyperparathyroidism (most common in outpatients), malignancy, vitamin D excess, certain medications.
  • Low albumin + abnormal liver enzymes → chronic liver disease.
  • Low albumin + edema + protein in urine → nephrotic syndrome.
  • High AST and ALT together → liver injury; AST > ALT favors alcohol or muscle, ALT > AST favors fatty liver or viral hepatitis.
  • High ALP with normal AST/ALT → bile duct or bone pathology; check GGT to discriminate.
  • High bilirubin with normal liver enzymes → Gilbert's syndrome (benign, common) or hemolysis.

Common interpretive pitfalls

  • Hemolyzed samples falsely raise potassium, AST, and LDH. If only those values are abnormal and the lab notes hemolysis, repeat the draw.
  • Dehydration distorts the entire panel — concentrating BUN, creatinine, sodium, hemoglobin, and others. Rehydration often resolves mild abnormalities.
  • Recent food can elevate glucose and triglycerides; always fast for an accurate fasting glucose.
  • Albumin correction for calcium: corrected calcium = measured calcium + 0.8 × (4.0 − albumin). Always correct calcium for albumin before interpreting.
  • Mild isolated abnormalities are often noise; the same value off the same panel a month later usually returns to normal. Pursue patterns and trends, not single flags.

Reading the metabolic panel longitudinally

The metabolic panel is one of the highest-value tests to track over time. Patterns that warrant attention:

  • Slow eGFR decline — even within the normal range, a drop of 5+ mL/min/year is the signature of progressive kidney disease.
  • Drift toward higher fasting glucose — preceding diabetes by years, often with HbA1c rising in parallel.
  • Persistent mild ALT elevation — most often metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MASLD); track FIB-4 alongside.
  • Falling albumin — chronic illness, malnutrition, or kidney protein loss.

Rastrea este biomarcador a lo largo del tiempo en AskAnything.health — sube tus resultados de laboratorio y ve las tendencias de un vistazo.

When the metabolic panel needs urgent attention

  • Potassium below 3.0 or above 6.0 — cardiac arrhythmia risk; immediate evaluation.
  • Sodium below 125 or above 155 — neurologic risk; immediate evaluation.
  • Glucose above 400 with symptoms — possible DKA or hyperosmolar state; emergency evaluation.
  • Bicarbonate below 15 with elevated anion gap — significant metabolic acidosis; emergency evaluation.
  • Acute creatinine doubling — acute kidney injury; investigate urgently.
  • AST or ALT above 1000 — fulminant liver injury; emergency evaluation (consider acetaminophen toxicity, ischemic hepatitis).
  • Calcium above 12 or below 7 — symptomatic in either direction; urgent evaluation.

Esta información es solo con fines educativos y no sustituye el consejo médico profesional. Siempre consulta a tu proveedor de salud sobre tus resultados de laboratorio.

Tests that complete the picture

  • HbA1c — three-month glucose average; companion to fasting glucose.
  • Lipid panel — usually ordered with the metabolic panel for cardiovascular risk.
  • Urine albumin/creatinine ratio — kidney damage marker; pairs with creatinine and eGFR.
  • Magnesium and phosphorus — additional electrolytes useful in advanced kidney disease and severe illness.
  • GGT — discriminates liver vs. bone source of high alkaline phosphatase.
  • Direct (conjugated) bilirubin — distinguishes obstructive from hemolytic hyperbilirubinemia.
  • Thyroid panel — thyroid disease affects multiple metabolic values.

Patterns to recognize

Combinations of values that together point at a specific clinical picture. One number rarely tells the whole story.

Prerenal AKI (dehydration)

  • BUN/Cr ratio >20
  • Bicarbonate low
  • Sodium normal or high
  • Creatinine acutely elevated

Volume depletion drops renal perfusion and concentrates urea relative to creatinine.

Next: Restore volume, hold NSAIDs and ACE/ARB, recheck creatinine in 24–48 hours.

Chronic kidney disease

  • eGFR <60 sustained ≥3 months
  • BUN and creatinine both elevated
  • Potassium drifting up
  • Bicarbonate drifting down

Sustained low eGFR with electrolyte and acid-base drift is the CKD signature on the metabolic panel.

Next: UACR, renal ultrasound, ACE/ARB, nephrology referral at G3b.

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)

  • Glucose >250 mg/dL
  • Bicarbonate <15
  • Anion gap >12
  • Beta-hydroxybutyrate elevated

High anion gap acidosis with hyperglycemia confirms DKA in an insulin-deficient patient.

Next: Emergency department: IV fluids, insulin infusion, potassium repletion.

Hyperkalemia from RAAS combo

  • Potassium >5.5 mEq/L
  • On ACE/ARB plus spironolactone or NSAID
  • eGFR reduced

Multiple potassium-retaining agents stacked on a marginal kidney is the most common iatrogenic hyperkalemia.

Next: Hold the offending agent(s), recheck potassium, ECG if >6.0 or symptomatic.

Type 2 diabetes (new diagnosis)

  • Fasting glucose ≥126 mg/dL confirmed
  • HbA1c ≥6.5% confirmed
  • Triglycerides high, HDL low
  • Central obesity

Two abnormal glucose tests with the lipid signature of insulin resistance establish diabetes.

Next: Start metformin, lifestyle intervention, screen for nephropathy and retinopathy.

Preguntas frecuentes

The Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP) covers electrolytes (sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate), kidney function (BUN, creatinine), and glucose — typically 7–8 tests. The Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) adds liver enzymes (AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase), bilirubin, total protein, and albumin — typically 14 tests. The CMP costs about the same and is the more useful panel for routine bloodwork.

For an accurate fasting glucose, yes — at least 8 hours. Most other values on the panel are minimally affected by recent meals. If the panel is bundled with a lipid panel, fasting is the standard.

BUN rises with reduced kidney filtration, dehydration, high-protein diet, GI bleeding, and certain medications. A BUN-to-creatinine ratio above 20 with a stable creatinine usually points at dehydration or prerenal causes; both elevated together with low eGFR suggests intrinsic kidney disease.

The most common cause of mildly elevated potassium on a routine panel is sample hemolysis (red cells release potassium during processing). True hyperkalemia comes from kidney disease, ACE inhibitors and ARBs, spironolactone or other potassium-sparing diuretics, NSAIDs, rhabdomyolysis, or massive cell turnover. Repeat with careful collection if the value is mildly elevated and unexpected.

Albumin reflects synthetic liver function, nutritional status, and protein losses (kidney or gut). Low albumin can indicate chronic liver disease, malnutrition, nephrotic syndrome, protein-losing enteropathy, severe burns, or chronic inflammation. Always interpret calcium values alongside albumin — albumin-bound calcium artifacts are common.

No. ALP is found in liver, bile ducts, and bone, with smaller contributions from intestine and placenta. To distinguish liver from bone source, check GGT — high GGT with high ALP points at liver/bile; normal GGT with high ALP points at bone (Paget disease, healing fracture, vitamin D deficiency, growing children).

The anion gap (sodium − chloride − bicarbonate) is normally 8–12. An elevated anion gap with low bicarbonate means metabolic acidosis from accumulated acid: diabetic ketoacidosis, lactic acidosis, kidney failure, or certain ingestions (methanol, ethylene glycol, salicylates). It is a clinically important pattern that warrants urgent evaluation.

In healthy adults, every 1–3 years as part of routine bloodwork. With chronic conditions like hypertension, diabetes, or kidney disease, every 3–12 months. On potentially nephrotoxic or hepatotoxic medications (NSAIDs, statins at high doses, lithium, methotrexate), at the cadence the prescriber recommends — typically every 3–6 months.

Rastrea tus resultados de laboratorio a lo largo del tiempo

Sube tus análisis de sangre y ve tendencias, rangos de referencia e información impulsada por IA — todo en un solo lugar.

Empezar

No es consejo médico. AskAnything.health es una herramienta de segunda opinión impulsada por IA diseñada para ayudarte a entender tus datos de salud. No diagnostica, trata ni reemplaza la atención médica profesional. Siempre consulta a un profesional de la salud calificado antes de tomar decisiones médicas. Tus datos se procesan de forma segura y nunca se comparten con terceros — consulta nuestra Política de privacidad.