Test Code LAB71 Creatinine, 24 Hour, Urine
Additional Codes
Test Name in EPIC | EPIC Test Code | Mnemonic |
---|---|---|
CREATININE, 24 UR | LAB71 | UCR24 |
Useful For/Utility
Identifying the presence of urine as a cause for accumulation of fluid in a body compartment and measuring the ultrafiltration capacity of the peritoneal membrane in patients receiving peritoneal dialysis
Methodology
Kinetic Alkaline Picrate
Clinical Information
Byproducts of nitrogen metabolism are present in high concentration in urine compared to blood and serve as a surrogate marker for the identification of urine leakage into a body compartment. Concentrations of creatinine or urea nitrogen that exceed the concentration found in a concurrent sample of blood are suggestive of the presence of urine.
Peritoneal, abdominal, pelvic drain fluid:
Trauma as well as abdominal or pelvic surgery can lead to bladder perforation or formation of urinary fistula with excessive accumulation of peritoneal fluid or increased surgical drain output caused by intraperitoneal urinary leakage.
Pleural fluid:
Urinoma describes the accumulation of urine in the perirenal and retroperitoneal spaces caused by genitourinary tract injury due to trauma or blockage of the urinary tract due to stones, strictures, tumors, benign prostate hypertrophy, etc.(3) Rarely, this fluid can translocate to the pleural cavity causing pleural effusion via movement of urine through the diaphragm or via lymphatic communication between retroperitoneal and pleural spaces caused by increased pressure due to urinoma. Urinothorax is the term used to describe an accumulation of urine in the pleural space. Patients often develop symptoms of dyspnea, chest pain, abdominal pain, and reduced diuresis.(4) The condition is reversed when treatment is directed to correct the primary cause (trauma in 75% and obstruction in 24% of cases). The pleural fluid to serum creatinine ratio is above 1 in 97.9% of cases (n=48; median ratio=2.9, range=0.95-16).
Peritoneal dialysis fluid:
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is a type of ambulatory dialysis in which hyperosmotic fluid is infused into the patient's peritoneal cavity, with the peritoneum employed as the dialysis membrane promoting the diffusion of small molecules and free water from circulation.(5) The peritoneal equilibration test estimates the rate of small solute transport across the peritoneal membrane and the ultrafiltration capacity. Several analytes may be measured in order to perform this test. Creatinine is measured in PD fluid as well as in plasma or serum in samples taken 2 and/or 4 hours after the dialysate is instilled. The dialysate fluid to serum or plasma creatinine ratio is calculated with larger ratios (approaching 1.0) observed in patients exhibiting faster transport rates.
Specimen Requirements
Specimen Type: Urine, 24 hour
Container/Tube: Aliquot
Specimen Volume: 5 mL
Specimen Minimum Volume: 2 mL
Collection Instructions:
1. No preservative.
2. Mix well before taking 5-mL aliquot.
Additional Information:
1. Starting and ending times of collection, and 24-hour volume are required.
2. Specimen containing 6N HCl or boric acid is acceptable.
3. See Urine Collection in Special Instructions for timed urine collection instructions.
Performing Laboratory
Measure 24-hour urine volume. Enter volume and hours of collection into LIS. If specimen is cloudy, spin and separate supernatant. Refrigerate specimen until analysis is performed.
Specimen Transport Temperature
Refrigerate 5 days/Frozen NO/Ambient NO
Day(s) Test Set Up
Monday through Sunday
Performing Laboratory
Chemistry-
St. Joseph's - Baxter Clinic Lab, St. Joseph's - Brainerd Clinic Lab, St. Joseph's Medical Center Lab
Ashland Clinic Lab, Deer River Hospital Lab, Ely Clinic Lab, Hayward Clinic Lab, Hibbing Clinic Lab, International Falls Clinic Lab, Moose Lake Hospital, Northern Pines Lab, Sandstone Hospital Lab, SMDC Clinical Lab, Spooner Clinic Lab, St. Mary's Hospital - Superior Lab, Virginia Hospital Lab
Ada Hospital Lab, Fargo Hospital Lab, Fosston Hospital Lab, Park Rapids Clinic Lab, St. Mary's - Detroit Lakes Hospital Lab
Test Classification and CPT Coding
82570
Reference Values
Males: 800-2,000 mg/24 hours
Females: 600-1,800 mg/24 hours