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Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing Urinalysis Cecile Sanders, M.Ed., MT(ASCP), CLS (NCA) Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Urinary system is an excretory system  Renal System (reproduced with permission from Baylor College of Medicine) Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Collection and Preservation of Urine – Urinalysis performed for two purposes  Check for metabolic by-products  Observe physical, chemical and microscopic characteristics – Types of Specimens  First morning urine specimen is preferred  Mid-stream (urine caught from middle of urine stream)  Clean catch (patient must cleanse urethral opening prior to urinating and catching urine) Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Handling – – – – and preserving specimens Examine within 1 hour of collection OR Refrigerate at 4-6° C for up to 8 hours Preservatives (least ideal) When urine sits at room temperature  Bacteria multiply  Glucose decreases  Casts and cellular elements decompose Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis – Color of urine  Yellow – dilute urine is usually lighter in color; concentrated urine is usually dark  Red – may have blood present  Brown/black – may be associated with melanoma  Yellow-brown or green-brown – may be associated with liver conditions such as hepatitis or cirrhosis Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Light yellow, brown, and dark yellow urines Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis – Transparency  Urine normally transparent  Turbid – may be associated with crystals that settle out of urine at room or refrigerator temperature  Cloudy – may be associated with UTI OR crystals Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis – Specific gravity is the ratio of the weight of a given volume of the solution (urine) to the weight of an equal volume of water  Indicates concentrations of dissolved chemicals such as glucose, salts, etc.  The result of the kidneys’ ability to concentrate urine  Normal values – 1.005-1.030 (Ave = 1.015)  Usually measured by dip stick or refractometer Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Chemical Examination of Urine – Reagent strips  Test pads are for pH, protein, glucose, ketone, bilirubin, blood, urobilinogen, specific gravity, leukocytes and bacteria  Used only once and discarded  Performing the chemical tests by reagent strip – Perform within 1 hour after collection OR – Allow refrigerated specimens to return to room temperature – Dip strip in fresh urine and compare color of pads to the color chart after appropriate time period – Instruments are available which detect color changes electronically Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Urine Multistix – reading dipstick results manually; colors are matched to those on the bottle label; timing is critical for each pad. Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis Multistix Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Bayer Clinitek automatically reads a urine dipstick and prints out results Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis  Principle of chemical tests – pH measures degree of acidity or alkalinity of urine – Presence of protein (proteinuria) is an important indicator of renal disease, such as pyleonephritis – Presence of glucose (glycosuria) indicates that the blood glucose level has exceeded the renal threshold, such as in diabetes Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis – Ketones are excreted when the body metabolizes fats incompletely (ketonuria), such as in diabetes – Bilirubin is a byproduct of the breakdown of hemoglobin. Its presence may be an indication of liver disease, bile duct obstruction or hepatitis – Presence of blood may indicate infection, trauma to the urinary tract or bleeding in the kidneys – Urobilinogen is a degradation product of bilirubin formed by intestinal bacteria. It may be increased in hepatic disease or hemolytic disease Unit #6A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis – Nitrite formed by gram negative bacteria converting urinary nitrate to nitrite. Presence of nitrites in fresh urine can indicate infection – in an old urine, nitrites can be positive without an infection – Leukocytes usually indicate infection – Specific gravity reflects kidney's ability to concentrate urine  Normal values – Negative results for glucose, ketones, bilirubin, nitrites, leukocyte esterase and blood – Protein negative or trace – pH 5.5-8.0 – Urobilinogen 0.2-1.0 Ehrlich units