Urine analysis
Dr. Usha
brought to you by yogesh
Introduction
Urine is formed in the kidneys, is a product
of ultrafiltration of plasma by the renal
glomeruli.
brought to you by yogesh
Collection of urine
Early morning sample-qualitative
Random sample- routine
24hrs sample- quantitative
Midstream sample-UTI
Post prandial sample-D.M
brought to you by yogesh
24 hour urine sample
1. For quantitative estimation of proteins
2. For estimation of vanillyl mandelic acid,
5-hydroxyindole acetic acid,
metanephrines
3. For detection of AFB in urine
4. For detection of microalbuminuria
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Urine examination
Macroscopic examination
Chemical examination
Microscopic examination
brought to you by yogesh
Macroscopic examination
Volume
Color
Odour
Reaction or urinary pH
Specific gravity
brought to you by yogesh
Urinary volume
Normal = 600-1550ml
Polyuria- >2000ml
Oliguria-<400ml
Anuria-complete cessation of urine(<200ml)
Nocturia-excretion of urine by a adult of >500ml
with a specific gravity of <1.018 at night
(characteristic of chronic glomerulonephritis)
brought to you by yogesh
Causes of polyuria
Diabetes mellitus
Diabetes insipidus
Polycystic kidney
Chronic renal failure
Diuretics
Intravenous saline/glucose
brought to you by yogesh
oliguria
Dehydration-vomiting, diarrhoea,
excessive sweating
Renal ischemia
Acute tubular necrosis
Obstruction to the urinary tract
Acute renal failure
brought to you by yogesh
Color & appearance
Normal= clear & pale yellow
1. Colourless- dilution, diabetes mellitus,
diabetes insipidus, diuretics
2. Milky-purulent genitourinary tract
infection, chyluria
3. Orange-fever, excessive sweating
4. Red-beetroot ingestion,haematuria
5. Brown/ black- alkaptunuria, melanin
brought to you by yogesh
Urinary pH/ reaction
Reaction reflects ability of kidney to
maintain normal hydrogen ion
concentration in plasma & ECF
Normal= 4.6-8
Tested by- [Link] paper
2. pH paper
3. dipsticks
brought to you by yogesh
Acidic urine
Ketosis-diabetes, starvation, fever
Systemic acidosis
UTI- [Link]
Acidification therapy
brought to you by yogesh
Alkaline urine
Strict vegetarian
Systemic alkalosis
UTI- Proteus
Alkalization therapy
brought to you by yogesh
Odour
Normal= aromatic due to the volatile fatty
acids
Ammonical – bacterial action
Fruity- ketonuria
brought to you by yogesh
Specific gravity
Depends on the concentration of various
solutes in the urine.
Measured by-urinometer
- refractometer
- dipsticks
brought to you by yogesh
Urinometer
Take 2/3 of urinometer container with urine
Allow the urinometer to float into the urine
Read the graduation at the lowest level of
urinary meniscus
Correction of temperature & albumin is a
must.
Urinometer is calibrated at 15or 200c
So for every 3oc increase/decrease
add/subtract 0.001
For 1gm/dl of albumin add0.001
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
High specific
gravity(hyperosthenuria)
Normal-1.016-1.022
Causes
All causes of oliguria
Gycosuria
brought to you by yogesh
Low specific
gravity(hyposthenuria)
All causes of polyuria except gycosuria
Fixed specific gravity (isosthenuria)=1.010
Seen in chronic renal disease when kidney
has lost the ability to concentrate or dilute
brought to you by yogesh
Chemical examination
Proteins
Sugars
Ketone bodies
Bilirubin
Bile salts
Urobilinogen
Blood
brought to you by yogesh
Tests for proteins
Test – HEAT & ACETIC ACID TEST
Principle-proteins are denatured & coagulated
on heating to give white cloud precipitate.
Method-take 2/3 of test tube with urine, heat only
the upper part keeping lower part as control.
Presence of phosphates, carbonates, proteins
gives a white cloud formation. Add acetic acid 1-
2 drops, if the cloud persists it indicates it is
protein(acetic acid dissolves the
carbonates/phosphates)
brought to you by yogesh
Other tests
Sulphosalicylic acid test
Dipsticks
Esbach’s albuminometer- for quantitative
estimation of proteins
brought to you by yogesh
Causes of proteinuria
Prerenal causes-Heavy
exercise,Fever,hypertension, multiple myeloma,
ecalmpsia
Renal –acute & chronic
glomerulonephritis,Renal tubular
dysfunction,Polycystic kidney, nephrotic
syndrome
Post renal- acute & chronic cystitis, tuberculosis
cystitis
brought to you by yogesh
Selective proteinuria
Nonselective proteinuria
brought to you by yogesh
microalbuminuria
The level of albumin protein produced by
microalbuminuria cannot be detected by
urine dipstick methods. In a properly
functioning body, albumin is not normally
present in urine because it is retained in
the bloodstream by the kidneys.
Microalbuminuria is diagnosed either from
a 24-hour urine collection
brought to you by yogesh
Significance of microalbuminuria
an indicator of subclinical cardiovascular
disease
an important prognostic marker for kidney
disease
in diabetes mellitus
in hypertension
increasing microalbuminuria during the first 48
hours after admission to an intensive care unit
predicts elevated risk for acute respiratory failure
, multiple organ failure , and overall mortality
brought to you by yogesh
Bence Jones proteins
These are light chain globulins seen in multiple
myeloma, macroglobulimias, lymphoma.
Test- Thermal method(waterbath):
Proteins has unusual property of
precipitating at 400 -600c & then dissolving
when the urine is brought to boiling(1000c) &
reappears when the urine is cooled.
brought to you by yogesh
Test for sugar
Test-BENEDICT’S TEST(semiquantitative)
Principle-benedict’s reagent contains
[Link] the presence of reducing sugars
cupric ions are converted to cuprous oxide
which is hastened by heating, to give the
color.
Method- take 5ml of benedict’s reagent in a
test tube, add 8drops of urine. Boil the
mixture.
Blue-green= negative
Yellow-green=+(<0.5%)
Greenish yellow=++(0.5-1%)
Yellow=+++(1-2%)
Brick red=++++(>2%)
brought to you by yogesh
Benedict’s test
Detects all reducing substances like
glucose, fructose, & other reducing
sustances.
To confirm it is glucose, dipsticks can be
used (glucose oxidase)
brought to you by yogesh
Causes of glycosuria
Glycosuria with hyperglycaemia-
diabetes,acromegaly, cushing’s disease,
hyperthyroidism, drugs like corticosteroids.
Glycosuria without hyperglycaemia-
renal tubular dysfunction
brought to you by yogesh
Ketone bodies
3 types
Acetone
Acetoacetic acid
β-hydroxy butyric acid
They are products of fat metabolism
brought to you by yogesh
Rothera’s test
Principle-acetone & acetoacetic acid react
with sodium nitroprusside in the presence
of alkali to produce purple colour.
Method- take 5ml of urine in a test tube &
saturate it with ammonium sulphate. Then
add one crystal of sodium nitroprusside.
Then gently add 0.5ml of liquor ammonia
along the sides of the test tube.
Change in colour indicates + test
brought to you by yogesh
Causes of ketonuria
Diabetes
Non-diabetic causes- high fever,
starvation, severe vomiting/diarrhoea
brought to you by yogesh
Bilirubin
Test- fouchet’s test.
Causes
Liver diseases-injury,hepatitis
Obstruction to biliary tract
brought to you by yogesh
Urobilinogen
Test- ehrlich test
Causes-hemolytic anemia's
Bile salts-
Hay’s test
Cause- obstruction to bile flow (obstructive
jaundice)
brought to you by yogesh
Blood in urine
Test- BENZIDINE TEST
Principle-The peroxidase activity of hemoglobin
decomposes hydrogen peroxide releasing
nascent oxygen which in turn oxidizes benzidine
to give blue color.
Method- mix 2ml of benzidine solution with 2ml
of hydrogen peroxide in a test tube. Take 2ml of
urine & add 2ml of above mixture. A blue color
indicates + reaction.
brought to you by yogesh
Causes of hematuria
Pre renal- bleeding diathesis,
hemoglobinopathies, malignant
hypertension.
Renal- trauma, calculi, acute & chronic
glomerulonephritis, renal TB, renal
tumors
Post renal – severe UTI, calculi,
trauma, tumors of urinary tract
brought to you by yogesh
Type Plasma color Urine color
Hematuria normal Smoky red
m/s-plenty of
RBC’s
hemoglobunuria Pink,hepatoglob Red ,
in reduced occasional
RBC’s
Myoglobunuria Pink, normal Red, occasional
hepatoglobin RBC’s
brought to you by yogesh
Microscopic examination
Microscopic urinalysis is done simply pouring
the urine sample into a test tube and
centrifuging it (spinning it down in a machine) for
a few minutes. The top liquid part (the
supernatant) is discarded. The solid part left in
the bottom of the test tube (the urine sediment)
is mixed with the remaining drop of urine in the
test tube and one drop is analyzed under a
microscope
brought to you by yogesh
Contents of normal urine m/s
Contains few epithelial cells, occasional
RBC’s, few crystals.
brought to you by yogesh
Crystals in urine
Crystals in acidic Crystals in alkaline
urine urine
Uric acid Ammonium
Calcium oxalate magnesium
Cystine
phosphates(triple
phosphate crystals)
Leucine
Calcium carbonate
brought to you by yogesh
crystals
brought to you by yogesh
casts
Urinary casts are cylindrical aggregations
of particles that form in the distal nephron,
dislodge, and pass into the urine. In
urinalysis they indicate kidney disease.
They form via precipitation of Tamm-
Horsfall mucoprotein which is secreted by
renal tubule cells.
brought to you by yogesh
Types of casts
Acellular casts Cellular casts
Hyaline casts Red cell casts
Granular casts White cell casts
Waxy casts Epithelial cell cast
Fatty casts
Pigment casts
Crystal casts
brought to you by yogesh
Hyaline casts
The most common type of cast, hyaline
casts are solidified Tamm-Horsfall
mucoprotein secreted from the tubular
epithelial cells
Seen in fever, strenuous exercise, damage
to the glomerular capillary
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Granular casts
Granular casts can result either from the
breakdown of cellular casts or the
inclusion of aggregates of plasma proteins
(e.g., albumin) or immunoglobulin light
chains
indicative of chronic renal disease
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Waxy casts
waxy casts suggest severe,
longstanding kidney disease such as
renal failure(end stage renal disease).
brought to you by yogesh
Waxy casts
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Fatty casts
Formed by the breakdown of lipid-rich
epithelial cells, these are hyaline casts
with fat globule inclusions
They can be present in various disorders,
including
nephrotic syndrome,
diabetic or lupus nephropathy,
Acute tubular necrosis
brought to you by yogesh
Fatty casts
brought to you by yogesh
Pigment casts
Formed by the adhesion of metabolic
breakdown products or drug pigments
Pigments include those produced
endogenously, such as
hemoglobin in hemolytic anemia,
myoglobin in rhabdomyolysis, and
bilirubin in liver disease.
brought to you by yogesh
Crystal casts
Though crystallized urinary solutes, such
as oxalates, urates, or sulfonamides, may
become enmeshed within a hyaline cast
during its formation.
The clinical significance of this occurrence
is not felt to be great.
brought to you by yogesh
Red cell casts
The presence of red blood cells within the
cast is always pathologic, and is strongly
indicative of glomerular damage.
They are usually associated with nephritic
syndromes.
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Erythrocyte cast
brought to you by yogesh
White blood cell casts
Indicative of inflammation or infection,
pyelonephritis
acute allergic interstitial nephritis,
nephrotic syndrome, or
post-streptococcal acute
glomerulonephritis
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
Leucocyte cast
brought to you by yogesh
Epithelial casts
This cast is formed by inclusion or
adhesion of desquamated epithelial cells
of the tubule lining.
These can be seen in
acute tubular necrosis and
toxic ingestion, such as from mercury,
diethylene glycol, or salicylate.
brought to you by yogesh
Urine dipsticks
Urine dipstick is a narrow plastic strip which
has several squares of different colors
attached to it. Each small square represents
a component of the test used to interpret
urinalysis. The entire strip is dipped in the
urine sample and color changes in each
square are noted. The color change takes
place after several seconds to a few minutes
from dipping the strip. If read too early or
too long after the strip is dipped, the results
may not be accurate.
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh
The squares on the dipstick represent the
following components in the urine:
specific gravity (concentration of urine),
acidity of the urine (pH),
protein in the urine (mainly albumin),
glucose (sugar),
ketones
blood
bilirubin and
urobilinogen
brought to you by yogesh
The main advantage of dipsticks is that
they are
1. convenient,
2. easy to interpret,
3. and cost-effective
brought to you by yogesh
The main disadvantage is that the
1. Information may not be very accurate as
the test is time-sensitive.
2. It also provides limited information about
the urine as it is qualitative test and not a
quantitative test (for example, it does not
give a precise measure of the quantity of
abnormality).
brought to you by yogesh
brought to you by yogesh