lab medicine conference : urinalysis jim holliman, m.d., f.a.c.e.p. professor of surgery and...

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Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency Medicine M. S. Hershey Medical Center Penn State University Hershey, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.

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Page 1: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Lab Medicine Conference :

Urinalysis

Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P.Professor of Surgery and Emergency MedicineDirector, Center for International Emergency MedicineM. S. Hershey Medical CenterPenn State UniversityHershey, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.

Page 2: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Indications for Urinalysis

ƒ Suspect / confirm UTIƒ R/O primary renal diseaseƒ R/O systemic disease with major

renal manifestationƒ Assess complications of

hypertensionƒ Assess presence or amount of

endogenous or exogenous excreted substances

Page 3: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Complete Urinalysis : Componentsƒ Color / appearanceƒ Specific gravityƒ pHƒ Chemistries

–protein–glucose–ketones–bilirubin / urobilinogen–hemoglobin / blood–nitrite–leucocyte esterase

ƒ Microscopic exam–cells / casts–bacteria–other organisms–crystals

Page 4: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Secondary, Optional Tests on Urine

ƒ Cultureƒ Quantitative cultureƒ Sensitivityƒ Gram stainƒ Acid-fast stainƒ Protein electrophoresisƒ Antigen detection

(immunofluorescence)ƒ Quantitative assays

Page 5: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

What is Urine, Anyway ?

ƒ 95 % water, 5 % solidsƒ 3 main components :

–water –urea–NaCl

ƒ Color from pigments urochrome & urobilin

ƒ Intensity of color parallels degree of contamination

Page 6: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Urinalysis : Important Aspects of Collection

ƒ "Clean - voided" specimen necessary if micro exam to be done–Cleansing of urethral meatus–Preinsert tampon if discharge present–Hold labia minora apart–Midstream specimen

ƒ "Mini-cath" is option to reliably avoid menstrual or vaginal discharge contamination

ƒ Adhesive perineal bag vs. direct bladder puncture with 22 g. needle are collection options for peds patients (or try "Perez reflex")

Page 7: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

“Minicath” urine collection tube

Page 8: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Problems with Delayed Analysis of Unrefrigerated Urine

ƒ Bacteria split urea to ammonia, & urine becomes alkaline

ƒ Casts decomposeƒ Red cells lyseƒ Bacterial counts increaseƒ Glucose decreases

Page 9: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Diagnostic Clues from Urine Odor

ƒ Volatile acids responsible for normal urine odor

ƒ Specific odors & dx's :–Acetone : DKA–Ammonia : infection with urea breakdown–Maple Syrup Urine Disease–Asparagus or garlic ingestion

Page 10: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Causes of Increased Turbidity of Urine

ƒ Urate crystals in acid urineƒ Phosphates in alkaline urineƒ RBC'sƒ WBC'sƒ Bacteriaƒ Vaginal secretionsƒ Fat globules

Page 11: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of red-orange urine color

Page 12: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of red or pink urine color

Page 13: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of purple urine color

Page 14: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of red-brown urine color

Page 15: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of brown-black urine color

Page 16: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of yellow-brown urine color

Page 17: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of yellow urine color

Page 18: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of yellow-orange urine color

Page 19: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of colorless urine

Page 20: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of milky-colored urine

Page 21: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Parasitic chyluria due to Wucheria bancrofti or other filaria ; can cause thoracic duct fistulas to the kidney or bladder

Page 22: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of blue-green urine color

Page 23: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of brown-green urine color

Page 24: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Differential diagnosis of yellow-green urine color

Page 25: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Interpretation of Specific Gravity in U/A's

ƒ S.G. is the ratio of urine density compared to a water standard

ƒ S.G. indirectly measures renal concentrating ability

ƒ Is measured by dipstick or refractometerƒ S.G. values :

–Distilled water : 1.000–Dilute urine : 1.001 to 1.010–Concentrated urine : 1.025 to 1.030

ƒ Correlation with osmolarity :–S.G. 1.010 = osmolarity 285 (same as serum)–S.G. 1.025 = osmolarity > 600

Page 26: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Causes of Falsely High S.G. Readings

ƒ Excretion of radiopaque contrast media

ƒ Excessive proteinuria (as in nephrosis or diabetes)

ƒ Excessive glycosuriaƒ Refrigerated urine

Page 27: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Diagnostic Clues from Urine pH

ƒ Range 4.6 to 8 ; normal about 6ƒ Animal protein diet : acid urineƒ Vegetable / fruit diet : alkaline urineƒ Stones that develop in alkaline urine :

–Calcium phosphate–Calcium carbonate–Mg PO4

ƒ Stones that develop in acid urine :–Uric acid–Cysteine–Calcium oxalate

Page 28: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Protein Analysis in U/A'sƒ Normal urine contains small amounts of

albumin & globulinƒ Proteinuria exists if > 20 mg/dl

–Incidence 6 to 9 % in asymptomatic patients

ƒ Dipstick tests use tetrabromophenol blue indicator system (yellow to green as conc. increases)–React mainly with albumin–False positive with quaternary ammonia compounds & phenazopyridine dyes

Page 29: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Clinitest Use for Detection of Glycosuria

ƒ Based on reduction of metal ions by glucose

ƒ False positive reactions due to :–Hypochlorite or chlorine–Other sugars (galactose, lactose, fructose, maltose, as during pregnancy)

ƒ Enzyme - based tests (glucose oxidase) are more specific for glucose

ƒ Can have false negative results with ascorbic acid, tetracycline, or high uric acid

Page 30: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Correlation of Urine Glucose Readings

Reading mg/deciliter Glucose

Negative 0

Trace 100

1+ 250

2+ 1000

3+ 2000

4+ >2000

Page 31: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis for Ketones in U/A's

ƒ Choices are :–Acetest (tablet)–Test tube (Rothera)–Dipstick

ƒ All use reaction between acetoacetic acid & nitroprusside to make a violet dye complex

ƒ Acetone reaction is < 5 % of color change

ƒ Beta-hydroxybutyrate not detected

Page 32: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Causes of False Positive Urine Ketones

ƒ Levodopaƒ Phenolphthalein (in laxatives)ƒ Insulinƒ Pyridium (phenazopyridine)ƒ Phenforminƒ Phenylketonuria

Page 33: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of Bilirubin in U/A's

ƒ Conjugated bilirubin in normal urine up to 0.002 mg/dl

ƒ Dipstick uses diazonium salt reagent (buff to pink to brown)

ƒ Positive test for urinary bilirubin with a negative urine urobilinogen indicates biliary obstruction

ƒ Phenazopyridine causes false positiveƒ False negatives :

–Chlorpromazine, selenium–Exposure to light (inactivates to biliverdin)

Page 34: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of Urobilinogen in U/A'sƒ Is colorlessƒ Produced as byproduct of bacterial

degradation of conjugated bilirubin ; enterohepatic circulation accounts for normal urinary excretion

ƒ Is increased with hemolysis or liver disease, & decreased with biliary obstruction

ƒ Phenazopyridine causes false positiveƒ High nitrates cause false negative (as in

red wines)

Page 35: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of Hemoglobin in U/A'sƒ Not detectable by naked eye unless >

1:1000 blood in urineƒ Uses peroxidase characteristic of

hemoglobin or myoglobin to change color of chromogen

ƒ Dipsticks detect both free Hgb & myoglobin, and intact RBC's

ƒ False positives from bromides, copper, iodides, oxidizing agents

ƒ False negative from ascorbic acid

Page 36: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of Nitrites in U/A's

ƒ Nitrites absent from normal urineƒ Most UTI bacteria reduce urinary nitrates to

nitrites using enzyme nitrate reductaseƒ Dipstick uses aromatic amine & diazonium

compound to produce pink color in presence of nitrite

ƒ False positive rare ( can be due to phenazopyridine)

ƒ False negatives :–Bacterial inhibition with antibiotics–High urine flow (dilutional) ; Frequent or continuous (foley) voiding–Ascorbic acid

Page 37: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of Leucocyte Esterase in U/A's

ƒ Any purple color on dipstick indicates > 5 WBC's/hpf

ƒ Detects intact & lysed WBC's & WBC casts

ƒ False negatives :–Cephalexin, gentamicin, nitrofurantoin

ƒ Up to 97 % sensitivity & 90 % specificity for culture - proven UTI's

Page 38: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Use of "Reflex Urinalysis" at Hershey Medical Center

ƒ "Reflex U/A" = dipstick (Chem 9)–Micro exam done at no extra charge if dip is positive for protein, Hgb, or leucocyte esterase

ƒ Is indicated for routine U/A's as part of routine physical exam, and in other patients without possible urologic sx

Page 39: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Costs for U/A's at Hershey Medical Center

ƒ $17.00 for inpatientsƒ $12.00 for outpatientsƒ If microscopic U/A ordered

separately :–Add $15.00 for inpatients–Add $13.00 for outpatients

ƒ Urine culture is $32.00ƒ Urine C&S is $79.00

Page 40: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Rationale for Use of Dipstick as Screening for Micro Exam of Urine

ƒ 5 combined studies : 3205 patients–Sensitivity : 94 %–Specificity : 72 %

ƒ HMC study : 50 patients–Sensitivity : 93 %–Specificity : 72 %

ƒ Post - test probability of abnormal urine sediment if reflex U/A is negative is 1 to 6 %

Page 41: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of WBC's in Urine

ƒ Normal WBC excretion in urine :–Up to 400,000 cells per hour–Averages 650,000 per day–10 WBC per ml. correlates with 1 WBC per hpf

ƒ Counts exceeding 10 WBC per ml. correlate with significant bactiuria in 40 to 84 %

ƒ Can have false negative if patient is leucopenic

Page 42: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

White blood cells in urine

Page 43: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Causes of Sterile Pyuria

ƒ Balanitis or urethritisƒ Bladder tumorsƒ Calculiƒ Exercise ƒ Feverƒ Glomerulonephritisƒ Renal tuberculosisƒ Viral infections

Page 44: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis of RBC's in Urineƒ Normal RBC excretion in urine :

–Up to 1,000,000 per day–Average 130,000 per day–So average is 1 RBC per 2 to 3 hpf or 500 to 1000 RBC per ml.

ƒ Hematuria then represents greater amounts of blood than these

ƒ For urine to be considered free of blood, both supernatant & sediment should be dipstick tested

Page 45: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Red blood cells in urine

Page 46: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Gross hematuria from congenital urethral stricture

Page 47: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis for Bacteria in U/A's

ƒ Bacteria are absent in normal bladder urine

ƒ Micturition commonly deposits bacteria in urine

ƒ Classic infection definition : > 100,000 organisms per ml. of freshly centrifuged, freshly voided urine

ƒ Correlations with infection :–Detection of any bacteria on uncentrifuged specimen– > 10 bacteria / hpf of centrifuged sample

Page 48: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Bacterial urethritis

(should be treated with topical and oral anti-Staph antibiotics)

Page 49: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Bacterial Counts in Urine

ƒ < 1000 colonies per ml. implies only contamination

ƒ Counts > 1000 and < 100,000 per ml. may imply infection

ƒ Counts > 100,000 / ml. almost always imply infection

ƒ Causes of false low counts :–pH < 5, S.G. < 1.003, voiding < 45 minutes from sample collection, urethral obstruction, infections with fastidious organisms, contaminants with string oxidants (bleach)

Page 50: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Diagnostic Significance of Cellular Casts

ƒ Represents contents of renal tubules discharged into urine

ƒ Cast width descriptions :–Narrow : 1 to 2 RBC's in width–Medium : 3 to 4 RBC's in width–Broad : > 5 RBC's in width ; these are formed in the collecting tubules & suggest severe renal disease

ƒ Cast types & associated diseases :–Broad, epithelial, fatty, granular, or waxy : parenchymal renal disease–RBC : acute glomerulonephritis–WBC : pyelonephritis

Page 51: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Diagnostic Aspects of Cellular Casts

ƒ RBC casts–Usually represent significant glomerular disease–Can occur after very strenuous exercise–Alkaline urine hemolyzes RBC's & can dissolve casts if analysis delayed

ƒ Hyaline casts–Clear, colorless ; due to protein precipitation–Occurence depends on urine flow, pH, degree of proteinuria

ƒ Granular casts–Result from disintegration of cell material into particles–Form waxy casts when renal failure is advanced

Page 52: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency
Page 53: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency
Page 54: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Hyaline casts from protein gel in the renal tubule ; normal sediment has one to two per high power field

Page 55: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Granular casts

Page 56: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Red blood cell casts

Page 57: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

White blood cell cast

Page 58: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Red cell casts in acute glomerulonephritis

Page 59: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Waxy granular and cellular casts in chronic glomerulonephritis

Page 60: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Hyaline cast with epithelial cells in tubulo-interstitial disease

Page 61: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Analysis for Crystals in U/A's

ƒ Crystals commonly found in normal urine

ƒ Pathologic crystals :–Cysteine (hexagonal ; not birefingent under polarized light, unlike uric acid)–Leucine (yellow spheres with striations)–Tyrosine (fine needles in rosettes)

ƒ Phosphate & urate crystals of little Dx significance

ƒ Calcium oxalate crystals sometimes indicate ethylene glycol poisoning (but can be normal)

Page 62: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Crystals found chiefly in alkaline urine

Page 63: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Sulfonamide crystals

Crystals found chiefly in acid urine

Page 64: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Ammonio-magnesium-phosphate (struvite) crystal due to chronic U.T.I. with Proteus (alkaline urine)

Page 65: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Uric acid crystals under bright field microscopy

Page 66: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Uric acid crystals under polarized light

Page 67: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Tyrosine crystals under bright field microscopy

Page 68: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Leucine crystals under bright field microscopy

Page 69: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Cystine crystals under bright field microscopy

Page 70: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Uric acid crystals in a 3 month old patient evaluated for orange diaper stains ; this situation calls for evaluation of renal function tests

Page 71: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Miscellaneous Agents Detectable on U/A Micro Exam

ƒ Spermatozoaƒ Trichomonadsƒ Candida albicansƒ Rarely Giardia or Entamoeba

histolyticaƒ Other parasites

–Schistosoma–Nematodes

Page 72: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Trichomonas vaginalis in urine

Page 73: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Candida albicans in urine

Page 74: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Measurements of Electrolytes in Urine

ƒ Ion specific electrodes currently used (same as for serum)

ƒ Clinical situations where measurements useful :–Sodium

ƒ Volume depletion, acute oliguria, hyponatremia (R/O SIADH)

–Chlorideƒ Determine if metabolic alkalosis is chloride resistant or sensitive

–Potassiumƒ Determine site of K+ loss in hypokalemia (if < 10 meq/liter, implies GI tract as source)

Page 75: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Interpretation of Urinary Chloride Levels in Metabolic Alkalosis

ƒ Urinary chloride 0 to 10 meq/liter ("chloride-responsive") :–Vomiting–NG suction–Diuretic effect–Post-hypercapnia

ƒ Urinary chloride > 10 meq/liter (approx. dietary intake) :–Severe hypokalemia–Renal failure–Edematous states–Mineralocorticoid excess–Licorice ingestion

Page 76: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Suggested Criteria for Obtaining Urine Cultures if UTI Suspected

ƒ All children (age < 14)ƒ All malesƒ Women with history of :

–Immunocompromise–Renal abnormalities–Diabetes mellitus–Recent instrumentation–Indwelling catheter–Prolonged Sx before seeking care–3 or more ( ? > 5 ) UTI's in last year–Recent pyelonephritis–Recent hospitalization

Page 77: Lab Medicine Conference : Urinalysis Jim Holliman, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Professor of Surgery and Emergency Medicine Director, Center for International Emergency

Lab Medicine Conference : UrinalysisSummary

ƒ Assess urine color & overall appearance

ƒ Decide if only dipstick analysis needed

ƒ Consider explanations for each abnormal component on dipstick & micro

ƒ Decide if additional studies (C & S, electrolytes, osmolality, etc.) needed