Urine Testing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Testing Urine with a Urine Reagent Strip PP6
Advertisements

Urinalysis Testing urine is known as urinalysis. It is performed when; A patient is admitted to hospital. May be repeated whilst the patient is in hospital.
Body Fluids Specimen Collections. Sputum Collections Sputum: secretions from the lower respiratory tract Useful in determining specific types of respiratory.
Urinalysis.
Urine specimen lecture NO(3)
Routine urine analysis
Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP) Professor Austin Community College
Unit 18 Laboratory Assistant Skills. Copyright © 2004 by Thomson Delmar Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.2 18:1 Operating the Microscope  Many different.
F ACULTY OF ALLIED MEDICAL SCIENCES Clinical chemistry (MLCC-203) 1.
CHARACTERISTICS OF URINE
Clinical Urine and Fluid Analysis Physical Examination of Urine
Urinalysis Prepared by Hamad ALAssaf
Characteristics of Normal and Abnormal Urine Heather Nelson, RN.
Dalia kamal Eldien Mohammed. Urine examination A. PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF URINE  The physical characteristics of urine include observations and measurements.
UA Problem Solving Questions
Physical Examination of Urine
Urinalysis.
Basic Examination of the Urine Specimen
Laboratory Assistant Skills
Lab 41 Urinalysis. Urine 180L/day filtrate  1.8L/day urine Sterile Contains: –Water (~ 95%) –Urea (from amino acids) –Creatinine (from muscle creatine.
Portland Community College
Unit #5A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis
WARM UP #9 12/13 Look in any of your 3 notes from Ch 4 and make 4 True or False questions. EXAMPLE: T or F. In a hypertonic solution cells shrink.
Performing the Urinalysis
URINALYSIS Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Urinalysis Collection and Interpretation
Week 7: Intro to UA Urinalysis Renal anatomy and physiology Nephron anatomy Urine collection and preservation Physical properties of urine Color Appearance.
An introduction to Urinalysis as performed in the Clinical Laboratory.
Hossein Baniamerian Kermanshah University of Medical Science
Urinalysis By Elkhedir Elgorashi Elkhedir Elgorashi Lecturer Immunology M Sc, MLT, MT(MOH)
Layers of kidney Renal capsule Renal cortex Renal medulla (Renal pyramid) (renal column)
Biology Urinalysis
Understanding the Urinalysis Paul Cousineau NP Youville Hospital and Rehab Center Paul Cousineau NP Youville Hospital and Rehab Center.
The purpose urine studies is to identify variation in substances normally found in the urine. Diseases of several organs and systems can alter the composition.
URINE Urine Physical properties
It ’ s not just water ! An introduction to Urinalysis as performed in the Clinical Laboratory.
Urine analysis.
 Visual exam A laboratory technician will examine the urine's appearance. Urine is typically clear. Cloudiness or unusual  odor may indicate a problem.
KAU-Faculty of Science- Biochemistry department Clinical biochemistry lab (Bioc 416) 2012 T.A Nouf Alshareef
Chapter 30 Urinalysis.
Identification of Normal Physical and Chemical Urine Constituents
URINALYSIS LAB 1.
Physical Examination of Urine
Urinalysis Unit 5 Chapter 27 Physical Examination of Urine Copyright © 2015 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Lab Procedures Chapter 46:Urinalysis
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Performing the Urinalysis
Chapter 42 Urinalysis.
Urinalysis.
Performing the Urinalysis
Performing the Urinalysis
Today’s Agenda: 4/3/14 Unit 5: What skills are necessary to be a Laboratory Assistant? Using a microscope Obtaining/examining a cultural specimen Spun.
Unit #5A – Clinical Laboratory Testing - Urinalysis
Exercise 44 Urinalysis.
Testing Urine with a Urine Reagent Strip PP6
Prof. Dr. Zeliha Büyükbingöl
Introduction to Urinalysis
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Unit 18 Laboratory Assistant Skills
Unit 18 Laboratory Assistant Skills
46 Urinalysis Lesson 1:.
Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP) Professor Austin Community College
Chapter 44 Urinalysis.
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Urinalysis Involves examination of the urine for overall characteristics, including appearance, pH, specific gravity, and osmolality as well as microscopic.
Finding the Clues Hidden in Urine
Presentation transcript:

Urine Testing

Testing Urine Unit 18:11

Urinalysis Examination of urine Physical Chemical Microscopic

Physical Testing of Urine Observing color, transparency & specific gravity

Color Normal: shade of yellow Pale: dilute Dark yellow, orange: concentrated Cloudy red: hematuria Clear-red: hemoglobin Yellow or beer-brown: bilirubin (bilirubinuria)

Transparency Normal: clear Cloudy: pus, mucus Milky: fats

Specific Gravity Normal: 1.005 to 1.030 Increased: dehydration, diabetes mellitus Decreased: kidney disease, diuretic, increased fluid intake

Odor Normal: Faintly aromatic Ammonia: old sample Foul: infection Sweet: DM, ketones

Chemical Testing pH Protein Glucose Ketones Bilirubin Urobilinogen Blood

Microscopic Testing Examine formed elements in urine Cells Casts Crystals Amorphous debris

Which urine is best? Fresh, warm urine Within 1 hour of collection Maybe refrigerated if needed

Precautions Must use standard precautions Gloves, possibly mask, eyewear Discard urine in a toilet Dispose of specimen in infectious waste bag

Using Reagent Strips to Test Urine Unit 18:12

Reagent Strips Firm plastic strip with chemical reactants attached to the strip Color change indicates presence of substance & amount of substance

Storage Sensitive to light, heat, moisture Store in dry, cool, dark area Keep bottle closed

Precautions Don’t touch chemical reactant pads May lead to inaccurate results or injure the skin

pH Measure of acidity or alkalinity of urine Normal: 5.5 to 8.0 Affected by: Diet Medications Kidney disease Starvation

Protein Normal: none Proteinuria may indicate kidney disease

Glucose Normal: none May indicate Diabetes mellitus

Ketones End product of fat metabolism Normal = none May indicate: Diabetes mellitus Fasting, dieting High fat diet

Blood Normal = none May indicate: Injury Infection Menstruation Kidney disease

Bilirubin Break down product of hemoglobin Normal = none May indicate: Liver disease

Urobilinogen Bilirubin converted by intestinal bacteria Normal: small amounts May indicate: Heart, spleen, liver or hemolytic disease

Spectrophotometers Automated strip analyzer More accurate than human eye

Refrigerated samples Must be returned to room temperature

Time Follow exact time for each chemical reaction

Measuring Specific Gravity Unit 18:13

Specific Gravity Density of a substance compared to the density of water Normal: 1.005 to 1.030

Urinometer Urine in a cylinder and calibrated float is placed in urine with a spinning motion Urine collects at curved line, meniscus Read of lower part of meniscus

Refractometer One drop of urine placed on device & look through an eyepiece Calibrate with water

Preparing Urine for Microscopic Examination Unit 18:4

Urine Sediment Solid materials suspended in urine

What urine? Fresh, early morning first voided specimen preferable Examine immediately Some elements disintegrate

Centrifuge Spin ~10-15 cc of urine Solid materials settle at the bottom

Preparation Clear urine on top is poured off Leave behind 1 cc in bottom

Examine immediately Drying occurs quickly & can distort substances

lpf and hpf Low power field and high power field Indicate amount seen in a field

RBCs Normal = none May indicate: Kidney disease Bleeding in urinary tract Menstruation

WBCs Normal = small numbers May indicate: infection

Bacteria Normal: none to small amount Large amount indicates infection

Other infectious agents Fungi, yeasts Parasites

Casts Formed in kidney tubules during kidney damage Normal = none

Crystals Dependent on urine pH