24 March 2010

Examination of Urine



Examination of Urine
By:Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP)
Professor
Austin Community College


Urine Color

* Normal urine color ranges from pale yellow to deep amber — the result of a pigment called urochrome
o B vitamins turn urine an eye-popping neon yellow BUT may also indicate liver disease.
o porphyria, a disease that affects your skin and nervous system, turns urine the color of port wine.

Urine Color

* Most changes in urine color are harmless and temporary and may be due to:
o Certain foods – beets may turn urine red
o Dyes in foods/drinks
o Supplements – vitamins
o Prescription drugs
* Unusual urine color can indicate an infection or serious illness .

Suggested Colors

* pale yellow (straw)
* light yellow
* yellow
* green-yellow (olive)
* red-yellow
* red
* red-brown
* brown-black
* black
* milky

Examples of Urine Color

Urine Clarity

* During the visual inspection, the MLT observes the urine's and determines how clear it is (its clarity).
* Urine clarity refers to how clear the urine is.
* Terms used: clear, slightly cloudy, cloudy, or turbid.
* “Normal” urine can be clear or cloudy.
* The clarity of the urine is not as important as the substance that is causing the urine to be cloudy.

Urine Clarity

* Substances that cause cloudiness but that are not considered unhealthy include:
o mucous,
o sperm and prostatic fluid,
o cells from the skin,
o normal urine crystals, and
o contaminants (like body lotions and powders).
* Other substances that can make urine cloudy (such as red blood cells, white blood cells, or bacteria) indicate a condition that requires attention.

Examples of Urine Clarity

Urine Color and Clarity

* Urine color and clarity can indicate what substances may be present in urine.
* Confirmation of suspected substances is obtained during the chemical and microsopic examination.

Chemical Examination

* Reagent strips are used only once and discarded.
* Testing
o Perform within 1 hour after collection
o Allow refrigerated specimens to return to room temperature.
o Dip strip in fresh urine and compare color of pads to the color chart after appropriate time period.
o Instruments are available which detect color changes electronically

Using Reagent Strips

* BRIEFLY dip the strip in urine.
* Colors are matched to those on the bottle label at the appropriate times.
* Timing is critical for accurate results.

Reagent Strips

Glucose

* Presence of glucose (glycosuria) indicates that the blood glucose level has exceeded the renal threshold.
* Useful to screen for diabetes.

Bilirubin

* Bilirubin is a byproduct of the breakdown of hemoglobin.
* Normally contains no bilirubin.
* Presence may be an indication of liver disease, bile duct obstruction or hepatitis.
* Since the bilirubin in samples is sensitive to light, exposure of the urine samples to light for a long period of time may result in a false negative test result.

Ketones

* Ketones are excreted when the body metabolizes fats incompletely (ketonuria)

Specific Gravity

* Specific gravity reflects kidney's ability to concentrate.
* Want concentrated urine for accurate testing, best is first morning sample.
* Low – specimen not concentrated, kidney disease.
* High – first morning, certain drugs

Blood

* Presence of blood may indicate infection, trauma to the urinary tract or bleeding in the kidneys.
* False positive readings most often due to contamination with menstrual blood.

Ph

* pH measures degree of acidity or alkalinity of urine

Protein

* Presence of protein (proteinuria) is an important indicator of renal disease.
* False negatives can occur in alkaline or dilute urine or when primary protein is not albumin.

Urobilinogen

* Urobilinogen is a degradation product of bilirubin formed by intestinal bacteria.
* It may be increased in hepatic disease or hemolytic disease

Nitrite

* Nitrite formed by gram negative bacteria converting urinary nitrate to nitrite

Leukocytes

* Leukocytes (white blood cells) usually indicate infection.
* Leucocyte esterase activity is due to presence of WBCs in urine while nitrites strongly suggest bacteriuria.

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

Handling and Storage of Strips

* Handling and Storage
o Keep strips in original container
o Do not touch reagent pad areas
o Reagents and strips must be stored properly to retain activity
+ Protect from moisture and volatile fumes
+ Stored at room temperature
o Use before expiration date

Procedure

* Dip strip briefly, but completely into well mixed, room temperature urine sample.
* Withdraw strip.
* Blot briefly on its side.
* Keep the strip flat, read results at the appropriate times by comparing the color to the appropriate color on the chart provided.

Sources of Error

* Timing - Failure to observe color changes at appropriate time intervals may cause inaccurate results.
* Lighting - Observe color changes and color charts under good lighting.
* QC - Reagent strips should be tested with positive controls on each day of use to ensure proper reactivity.
* Sample - Proper collection and storage of urine is necessary to insure preservation of chemical.

Sources of Error

* 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

Examination of Urine

Read more...

Blood Collection



Blood Collection

An overview of the process involved in collecting donor blood

Donor Screening
* Starts with the donor and first impressions are critical
* Clean, well lit donation facility from waiting room to collection area
* Pleasant, professional staff who can ask the appropriate questions, observe and interpret the responses, and ensure that the collection process is as pleasant as possible

Blood Bank versus Blood Center
* Confusion exists and terms are sometimes used inappropriately
* Blood bank in a hospital is also known as the transfusion service, performs compatibility testing and prepares components for transfusion
* Blood Center is the donation center, screens donors, draws donors, performs testing on the donor blood, and delivers appropriate components to the hospital blood bank

Standards, Regulations, Governing Bodies
* Strict guidelines exist and inspections are performed in both blood centers and blood banks to ensure the safety of the donors and patients
* Some or all of the following agencies may be involved:
o AABB – American Association of Blood Banks
o FDA – Food and Drug Administration
o CAP – College of the American Pathologists
o JCAHO - Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospital Organizations
o NCCLS – National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards

Donor Screening
* Medical History based on a standardized questionnaire obtains critical information about the donor’s health and risk factors which may make it unsafe for donation
* Physical Exam which includes blood pressure, temperature, pulse and screen for anemia are performed to ensure donor is healthy enough to donate.
* Two goals of screening
o Protect the health of the potential donor
o Protect the health of the potential recipient

Donor Registration
* Donor signs in
* Written materials are given to the donor which explains high risk activities which may make the donor ineligible
* Donor must be informed and give consent that blood will be used for others unless they are in a special donor category
* First time donors must provide proof of identification such as SS#, DL#, DOB, address and any other unique information.
* Repeat donors may be required to show DL or some other photo ID

Frequency of donation
* Whole blood or red blood cells 8 weeks
* Plateletpheresis – up to 24 times/year
* Plasmapheresis– once every 4 weeks, can be done twice a week
* Granulocytes

Medical History
* A thorough history is obtained each time
* Standardized universal questionnaire is used
* Questions are asked that are very intimate in nature but are critical in assessing HIV or HBV risks
* Medications the donor taking are present in plasma, may cause deferral
* Infections the donor has may be passed to recipient, may be cause for deferral

12 Month Deferral
* Any intimate sexual relations with HIV positive, HBV positive, hemophiliacs, drug users or individuals receiving drugs/money for sex.
* Recipient of blood, components or blood products such as coagulation factors
* Sexually transmitted disease-if acquired indicates safe sex not practiced and donor at risk for HIV and HBV
* Travel to malarial endemic country

Temporary Deferrals
* Certain immunizations
o 2 weeks -MMR, yellow fever, oral polio, typhoid
o 4 weeks -Rubella, Chicken Pox
o 2 months – small pox
* Pregnancy – 6 weeks upon conclusion
* Certain medications
o Proscar/Propecia, Accutain – 1 month
o Avodart – 6 months
o Soriatane – 3 years
o Tegison - permanent

Permanent Deferrals
* HIV, HBV, or HCV positive
* Protozoan diseases such as Chagas disease or Babesiosis
* Received human pituitary growth hormone
* Donated only unit of blood in which a recipient contracted HIV or HBV
* Was the only common donor in 2 cases of post-transfusion HIV or HBV in recipient
* Lived in a country where Creutzfeld-Jacob disease is prevalent
* Most cancers except minor skin cancer and carcinoma in-situ of the cervix
* Severe heart disease, liver disease

Helpful Hint
* Permanent deferral – any member of high risk group such as: HIV/HBV/HCV pos, drugs/sex for money, cancer, serious illness or disease, CJD, Chagas disease, Babesiosis
* 12 month deferral – sex with any high risk group, any blood exposure, recipient of blood/blood products, STD, jail/prison, rabies vaccine after exposure, HBIG, malaria
* Have to memorize: medications and vaccinations

Self-Exclusion
* Two stickers
o “Yes, use my blood”
o “No, do not use my blood”
* After interview the donor will place the appropriate bar coded label on the donation record
* If “no” selected the unit is collected, fully tested, but not used for transfusion
* Allows donors who know they are at risk to “save face” if pressured to donate by friends and family

Donor Categories
* “Allogeneic”, “homologous” and “random donor” terms used for blood donated by individuals for anyone’s use
* Autologous – donate blood for your own use only
* Recipient Specific Directed donation – donor called in because blood/blood product is needed for a specific patient
* Directed Donor – patient selects their own donors
* Therapeutic bleeding – blood removed for medical purposes such as in polycythemia vera. NOT used for transfusion.

Auto/Directed Blood Labels
Donor Categories
* Safest is autologous, blood is your own, no risk of disease acquisition
* Most dangerous is Directed Donor, you select a donor who may, unknown to you, be in a high risk category but feels obligated to follow through and donate

Blood Collection
* Materials used are sterile and single use.
* Most important step is preparing the site to a state of almost surgical cleanliness.
* Bacteria on skin, if present, may grow well in stored donor blood and cause a fatal sepsis in recipient
* Use 16-17 gauge needle to collect blood from a single venipuncture within 15 minutes
* Collect 450 +/- 45 mLs of blood

Donor Reactions
* Syncope (fainting)
o Remove needle immediately
* Hyperventilation
o Have donor rebreathe into paper bag.
* Nausea/vomiting
* Twitching/muscle spasms
* Hematoma
* Convulsions – rare, get immediate assistance
* Cardiac difficulties

Post-Phlebotomy Care
* Donor applies pressure for 5 minutes
* Check and bandage site
* Have donor sit up for few minutes
* Have donor report to refreshment area for additional 15 minutes of monitoring

Post-Phlebotomy Instructions
* Eat/drink before leaving
* Wait until staff releases you
* Drink more fluids next 4 hours
* No alcohol until after eating
* Refrain from smoking for 1 hour
* If bleeding continues apply pressure and raise arm
* Faint or dizzy sit with head between knees
* Abnormal symptoms persist contact blood center.
* Remove bandage

Testing Donor Blood
* CANNOT rely on previous testing
* Records must be kept for 5 years

Serological Testing
* ABO/D typing
* Antibody Screen – if positive, ID antibody, cannot make plasma products
* Antibodies to other blood group antigens which are present in the donor may react with recipient red cells resulting in a reaction.

Disease Testing
* Disease testing include:
o HBsAG
o HBc
o HCV
o HIV 1&2
o HTLV I/II
o RPR
o NAT for HIV-1, HCV & WNV

Results of Testing
* Tests for disease markers must be negative or within normal limits.
* Donor blood which falls outside these parameters must be quarrantined.
* Repeat testing, if still abnormal must dispose.

Transfusion Service Testing
* The only repeat testing required is:
o ABO on red cell products
o D typing (IS) on D negative red cell products
* Plasma products (FFP, CRYO, PLTS) do not require any testing.
* Donor samples must be stored at 1-6C for at least 7 days after transfusion
o ADSOL unit transfused today must save sprig for one week
o Many facilities will pull a sprig from each donor during processing and save all sprigs for 49 days, regardless of expiration of unit

Summary
* Blood collection starts with screening of the donor to:
o Ensure they are healthy enough to donate
o Ensure they do not have transmissible diseases
* Many organizations set standards and monitor all aspects of blood collection and administration.
* Collection of blood must be done in such a manner as to ensure sterility of the component.
* Testing of donor blood includes serological testing for ABO/D typing, antibody screening, and testing for markers indicating infection.
* The blood supply is NOT safe, only careful screening and testing can prevent, as much as possible, disease transmission.

Blood Collection

Read more...

Assessment of Protein Status



Assessment of Protein Status
FCSN 442 - Nutrition Assessment Laboratory
By:Dr. David L. Gee
Central Washington University

Assessment of Protein Status
* Anthropometric Assessment
o body composition estimations
o midarm muscle circumference/area
* Laboratory Assessment
o serum albumin
o other serum proteins (transferrin, prealbumin, retinol-binding protein)
o urinary creatinine excretion
o total lymphocyte count

Midarm Muscle Area
* Estimate of MAMA is an estimate of overall muscle mass
* Assumptions

Midarm Muscle Circumference
* MAMC = AC - (.314 x TSF)

* “…change in arm muscle area is greater than the change in mid-arm circumference. Consequently, changes in upper-arm musculature are not as easily detected by measurement of mid-arm circumference as by AMA. Therefore, AMA is the preferred nutritional index.”

Arm Muscle Area
* AMA = ((MAC - (3.14 x TSF)2 ) / (4 x 3.14)
* adjusted AMA

Guidelines for Interpreting Percentile Values for Arm Muscle Area (appendix R)
Biochemical Assessment of Protein Status
* Two protein compartment model
* “No single test or group of tests can be recommended at this time as a routine and reliable indicator of protein status.” Young, 1990
* “…a combination of measures can produce a more complete picture of protein status.”

Serum Albumin
* Major serum protein
* Most common indicator of depleted protein status
* Half life = 14-20 days
* poor indicator of early protein depletion and repletion
* Levels affected by rate of synthesis (liver disease may reduce levels)
* May reflect level of physiological stress
* Levels affected by abnormal losses
* Levels affected by fluid status
* Normal values: 4.5 g/dL + 35-50 (SD)

Serum Transferrin
* Function: transport protein for iron
* half-life = 8-9 days
* Influenced by other factors
* limited usefulness in protein status assess.

Serum Prealbumin
* aka. transthyretin and thyroxine-binding prealbumin
* functions:
* short half life (2-3d), small body pool
* Returns to normal at beginning of nutritional therapy
* Influenced by other factors
* generally considered preferable than albumin and transferrin

Retinol Binding Protein
* Function: carrier for retinol
* responds like prealbumin
* very rapid turnover (12 hours), very small body pool
* generally not considered to be more useful than prealbumin

Immunocompetence
* Immune system affected by nutritional status
* Tests of immunocompetence useful functional indicators of nutritional status
* Delayed Cutaneous Hypersensitivty (DCH)
o intradermal injection of antigens
* Total Lymphocyte Count (TLC)

Total Lympocyte Count
* White blood cell count
* TLC = (%lymp x WBC)x100
* Normal = 1200-1800 cells/mm3
* Moderate PCM = 800-1200
* Severe PCM = < 800 Urinary Creatinine Excretion * Creatinine excreted in proportion to muscle mass * LBM estimated by comparing 24-hr urine creatinine excretion with standard based on stature or reference values of 23 and 18 mg/kg for M and F Example: Creatinine Height Index * CHI = (24 hr urine creatinine x 100) / (expected 24 hr urine creatinine for height) o CHI = 1436/1596 x 100 = 90% * expected values in table 9-1 (p306) o CHI > 80% = normal
o CHI = 60-80% = mild protein depletion
o CHI = 40-60% = moderate depletion
o CHI < 40% = severe depletion Assessment of Protein Status

Read more...
All links posted here are collected from various websites. No video or powerpoint files are uploaded on this blog. If you are the original author and do not wish to display your content on this blog please Email me anandkumarreddy at gmail dot com I will remove it. The contents of this blog are meant for educational purpose and not for commercial use. If you use any content give due credit to the original author.

This site uses cookies from Google to deliver its services, to personalise ads and to analyse traffic. Information about your use of this site is shared with Google. By using this site, you agree to its use of cookies.

  © Blogger templates Newspaper III by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP