Urinalysis Flashcards

1
Q

Urinalysis

A
  • Test the characteristic and composition of freshly voided urine
  • Screening for disease
  • Diagnosis of a suspected condition
  • Management and monitoring progress of a condition
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2
Q

Characteristics

A
  • Colour (Pale to amber Vitamin B supplements can turn urine bright yellow. Some medicines, blackberries, beets, rhubarb, or blood in the urine can turn the urine red-brown)
  • By-product of haemoglobin breakdown, urochrome, gives colour
  • Affected by concentration, haematuria, diet
  • Clarity usually transparent, if cloudy, no fresh, proteinuria, infection, bacteriuria
  • Odour - characteristic inoffensive (stronger/offensive if left stagnant or infection present. Sweet if ketones are present)
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3
Q

Significance of Composition

A
  • 96% Water + 4% Dissolved Substances
    ~ Urea
    ~ Uric Acid, Creatinine, Sodium, Potassium, Chlorides, Sulphates, Phosphates
    ~ Epithelial Cells, Leukocytes
  • pH of 4.5-8
  • pH measures degree of acidity to alkalinity of urine
  • Low pH means more acid
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4
Q

Specific Gravity

A
  • Specific Gravity reflects the kidney’s ability to concentrate or dilute urine
  • Want more concentrated urine for accurate testing, best is first morning urine sample
  • Low SG means the urine is not concentrated and kidney disease could be present
  • High SG could mean the sample is first morning urine, certain drugs may be taken, or dehydration
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5
Q

Bilirubin

A
  • Bilirubin is a byproduct of the breakdown of haemoglobin
  • Urine normally contains no Bilirubin
  • Presence may be an indication of liver disease, bile duct obstruction, or hepatitis
  • A false positive may result when certain drugs are taken
  • A false negative may occur when the sample is exposed to sunlight
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6
Q

Blood

A
  • Presence of blood in the urine may indicate infection, trauma to the urinary tract, or bleeding in the kidneys
  • False positive readings are most often due to contamination with menstrual blood
  • A positive result will result in further investigation
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7
Q

Glucose

A
  • Presence of Glucose (glycosuria not uncommon during pregnancy) indicates that the blood glucose level has exceeded the renal threshold
  • Renal threshold lowers in pregnancy
  • Useful to screen for diabetes
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8
Q

Ketones

A
  • Ketones are excreted when the body metabolises fats incompletely (ketonuria)
  • May occur due to fasting, vomiting (hyperemesis gravidarum) uncontrolled diabetes
  • Some drugs (Captopril) may give a false positive
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9
Q

Leukocytes

A
  • Leukocytes (white blood cells) usually indicate infection
  • Specimen may be contaminated by Leukocytes from another source (Vaginal Discharge)
  • When found with nitrates, bacteriuria is strongly suggested
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10
Q

Nitrites

A
  • Indicative of UTI
  • Diet source of Nitrates in urine in presence of Bacteria
  • Formed by gram negative bacteria converting urinary nitrate to nitrite
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11
Q

Protein

A
  • Presence of protein (proteinuria) is an important indicator of renal disease
  • Transient positive test usually insignificant due to small amount of albumin and globulin in the urine
  • May also result from contamination, vaginal discharge which increases during pregnancy
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12
Q

Urobilinogen

A
  • Urobilinogen is a degradation product of bilirubin formed by intestinal bacteria
  • It may be increased in hepatic disease or haemolytic disease
  • Normally present in small amounts
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13
Q

Normal Values

A
  • Negative results for glucose, ketones, bilirubin, nitrites, leukocyte esterase and blood
  • Protein negative or trace
  • pH 5-8.0
  • Urobilinogen 0.2-1.0 Ehrlich units
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14
Q

Handling & Storage

A
  • Keep strips in original container
  • do not touch reagent pad areas
  • Reagents and strips must be stored properly to retain activity
  • Protect from moisture
  • Store at room temperature
  • Use before expiration date
  • Lid on tightly
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15
Q

Procedure

A
  • Dip strip completely into well mixed, room temperature fresh urine sample
  • Withdraw strip
  • Blot briefly on its side
  • Keep the strip flat, read results at the appropriate times by comparing the colour to the appropriate colour on the chart provided
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16
Q

Errors

A
  • Timing - Failure to observe colour changes at appropriate time intervals may cause inaccurate results
  • Lighting - Observe colour changes and colour charts under good lighting.
  • Sample - Proper collection and storage of urine is necessary to insure preservation of chemical
  • Testing Cold Specimens - Would result in a slowing down of reactions; test specimens when fresh or bring them to RT before testing
  • Inadequate Mixing of Specimen - Could result in false, reduced, or negative reactions to blood and leukocyte tests; mix specimens well before dipping
  • Over-dipping of Reagent Strip - Will result in leaching of reagents out of pads; briefly, but completely dip the reagent strip into the urine.