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Hematuria. Epidemiology. Hematuria Defn- presence of excessive numbers of red blood cells (RBCs) in the urine macroscopic-- gross microscopic-- visible with the aid of a microscope only. Epidemiology. Hematuria Normal patients can excrete 10 4 to 10 5 RBC in a 12-hr period
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Epidemiology • Hematuria • Defn- presence of excessive numbers of red blood cells (RBCs) in the urine • macroscopic-- gross • microscopic-- visible with the aid of a microscope only
Epidemiology • Hematuria • Normal patients can excrete 104 to 105 RBC in a 12-hr period • Corresponds to several RBCs in the sediment of a randomly collected, centrifuged specimen under high power magnification • therefore hematuria is >4 RBC/hpf of urine sediment
Epidemiology • Hematuria • Children • prevalence of microheme approximately 4% • majority have normal UAs on f/u and do not develop urinary tract pathology • therefore isolated microheme in children does not require extensive evaluation
Epidemiology • Hematuria • recall • dipsticks detect globin pigments-- not RBCs, therefore a positive dipstick must be validated by microscopy • r/o myoglobinuria (rhabdomyolysis) and severe hemolysis
Glomerulus Hematuria Tubule Where did the RBCs come from? bladder urethra ureter penis vagina prostate rectum
Glomerulus Hematuria Tubule Where did the RBCs come from? • Proliferative GN • Primary • IgA • Post-infx GN • MPGN • Crescentic GN • Fibrillary GN • Secondary • HSP • SLE • Anti-GBM (Good pasture's) • Systemic Vasculitis • Chronic Bacteremia • Cryoglobulinemia • Hepatitis B/C • Non-Proliferative • Minimal Change • FSGS • Membranous • HUS • Familial Glomerular Dz • Alport's syndrome • Thin basement membrane disease • Fabry disease • Nail-Patella ureter prostate
Hematuria - Where did the RBCs come from? Glomerulus Tubule Renal Causes-- Non-Glomerular • Familial • ADPKD • Medullary Cystic Disease • Medullary Sponge Kidney • Papillary Necrosis • Analgesic abuse • Sickle Cell Disease and Trait • Renal TB • DM • Obstructive uropathy • Alcoholism • Anklosing Spondyltis • Hydronephrosis • Drugs • interstitial nephritis • Trauma • Renal Contusion or laceration • Exercise hematuria • Neoplasms • renal cell cancer • Wilms tumor • benign cysts • tuberous sclerosis • multiple myeloma • Vascular • renal infarct • renal vein thrombosis • malignant hypertension • AVM • Loin-pain hematuria • Metabolic • Hypercalcuria • Hyperoxaluria • Hyperuricosuria • Cystinuria ureter prostate
Glomerulus Hematuria-- non renal • Calculi • ureter, bladder, prostate • Neoplasms • TCC • prostate Ca/BPH • squamous cell • Infections • cystitis, prostatitis, urethritis • TB • Schistosomiasis • Drugs • cyclophosphamide • anticoagulants • Trauma • Contusion/laceration • exercise induced hematuria • foreign body • decompression of severely • distended bladder • Genital or anal bleeding Tubule bladder urethra ureter penis vagina prostate rectum
Hematuria • History • frequency/dysuria - UTI • hesitancy, weak stream, and dribbling - bladder obstruction 2nd stone/tumor/ prostate • colicky flank pain that radiates to groin-- stone or renal papillary necrosis • arthralgia/arthritis/rash - systemic inflammatory disorder-- HSP, SLE, or other systemic vasculitis • s/p bloody diarrhea -- think HUS
Hematuria • History • 1-2 weeks s/p pharyngitis/skin infection - post-strep GN • family h/o deafness/hematuria/renal failure -Alport's syndrome (hereditary nephritis) • transient hematuria s/p exertion • foreign travel--Schistosoma haematobium
Hematuria • Type of bleeding • Color • brown or cola-colored-- usually kidney • pink or red usually suggests extra-renal • Clots • usually indicated a non-renal source
Hematuria • Physical Exam • Vitals-- hypertension-- esp new c/w renal pathology • HEENT- • CV- • Resp- • Abd-- • Ext-- edema more c/w renal pathology • arthritis-- SLE/inflammatory d/o • GU-- vaginal/rectal source of blood. BPH? • Skin-- rash
Hematuria • UA • proteinuria accompanying hematuria is glomerular disease until proven otherwise • don’t send to Urology to r/o stones/TCC • Potential error-- HgB is a protein -- nl Hgb (12grams/dl), therefore hematuria (if hemolyzed) can easily cause measurable proteinuria • Pyuria-- frequently seen with UTI/STDs
Hematuria • Urine microscopy • Crystals • Casts-- presence also points toward renal pathology • dysmorphic RBCs • presence confirms glomerular disease, absence has no diagnostic implications
HematuriaGlomerular • Labs • Chem 7 • serum complement • low-- MPGN, SLE, cryoglobulinemia • ASO and anti-Dnase B • HepBsAG, anti-HC • ANA • Other (depending upon clinical scenario) • anti-gbm-- pulm hemorr or rpgn • anca- s/s of vasculitis • cryoglobulins • pt/ptt • sickle screen
HematuriaGlomerular • Additional studies/info • r/o hereditary nephropathy • Alport’s, Thin Basement Membrane Disease (AKA benign familial hematuria), and ADPKD • screen all available family members with UA • if Alport’s suspected • audiologic examination • anterior lenticonus, yellowish perimacular flecks
HematuriaGlomerular • Biopsy • considered on a case by case basis • risks-- 1/2000 - 1/5000 risk of death, defining disease often will NOT result in a change in therapy • avoid if s/p recent sore throat, acute nephritis, and low complements • usually performed if associated with renal insufficiency, proteinuria, or low complement
If pyuria- urine culture STD screen African-American consider SICKLE CELL TRAIT OR DISEASE h/o cytoxan therapy hemorrhagic cystitis HematuriaNonglomerular Hematuria
If initial evaluation unremarkable: renal US KUB and >40yo, consider urology referral urine cytology cystoscopy HematuriaNon-glomerular Hematuria
Initial Evaluation • Rule out obvious benign causes • Infection • Irritative sx’s or WBCs on U/A Culture • Treat appropriately • Men – 30 days of quinolone & consider GU evaluation • Repeat U/A in 6 weeks • Activity • Vigorous exercise, sex, virus, trauma, menses • Repeat U/A 48+ hours after cessation • External lesions • Examine penis or perineum & vagina
Initial Evaluation • Rule out nephrologic hematuria • Proteinuria • 1+ on dipstick, >500-1000 mg on 24 hr urine • RBC Casts • Pathognomonic for glomerular bleeding • Dysmorphic RBCs • Variation in size & shape, irregular/distorted outline • Predominance suggest glomerular origin • Renal insufficiency • New rise in creatinine
General Evaluation • Imaging upper tracts • Cytology • Cystoscopy • Modify based on risk factors
Imaging • Looking for: • Renal tumors • Collecting system tumors • Stones • Other – UPJO, infection
Imaging • IVP • Old standard • Misses smaller stones and masses • Ultrasound • Misses smaller solid masses • Operator & body habitus dependent • OK for screening low-risk pts • Good in combo with retrograde pyelograms for contrast allergic pts.
Imaging • CT • Current “Gold Standard” • Stones: 94-99% sensitive • Masses: excellent down to ~1 cm • “Hematuria protocol” • No oral or rectal contrast • Non-contrast spiral CT full GU tract • Renal dedicated IV contrast view(s) • Early (arterial) and nephrographic • Excretory phase of full GU tract
Imaging • CT • How to order • 3 separate orders • CT, ABDOMEN WO/W CONTRAST 74170 8120 • CT, PELVIS WO/W CONTRAST 72194 8142 • CT, KIDNEYS W/WO CONTRAST 74170 8114 • “Hematuria protocol” in comments at NNMC • ?? CHCS order line coming soon ??
Imaging • Retrograde pyelogram • Collecting system anatomy only • In conjunction with non-contrast CT or ultrasound for contrast allergic patients • To confirm abnormality on initial imaging • Performed at the the time of clinic cystoscopy • !! Best to have imaging results prior to cystoscopy
Cytology • Examination of exfoliated cells in the urine • Looking for malignant cells • Sensitivity for urothelial cancer • Excellent (90+%) for high-grade • Poor (40%) for low-grade • “Reactive” cells often suggest a stone • “Atypical” or “Suspicious” • Only 15% truly malignant
Cytology • How to order • Lab • CYTOLOGIC NON-GYN • # Container Specimen Description Frozen • = ====== =================== ====== • 1 A Voided urine NO • 2 B Voided urine NO • 3 C Voided urine NO
Cytology • Patient instructions • Well hydrated & active • Not first morning void • Fill container • Refrigerate immediately • Turn in <24 hrs
Cystoscopy • Complete visualization of the bladder mucosa • Anatomy of urethra, prostate, ureteral orifices
Low-Risk Evaluation • No risk factors • CT • Stop after non-contrast phase if cause found • Ultrasound also reasonable • Either cystoscopy or cytology
Benign Hematuria • Benign/Isolated/Idiopathic Hematuria • Negative full workup • ~2/3 have mild structural abnormality if biopsied • At risk for mild nephropathy with low risk of progression • <3% have missed malignancy
Follow-Up • Follow-Up Protocol • Annual • Urinalysis • Cytology x1 • BP • Start in 6 months, continue for three years • Modify based on risk
Follow-Up • Re-evaluate if: • Significant increase in hematuria • Ex. 5-10 now 25-50 RBC/HPF • Abnormal urinary cytology • Irritative voiding symptoms develop in the absence of infection • Nephrology Evaluation • HTN, Proteinuria, RBC Casts, Dysmorphic RBCs
Take Home Messages • Dx: 3 RBC/HPF, 2/3 samples, properly collected • R/o benign & nephrologic causes • Begin w/u with CT & cytology x3 • Consult Urology • Cystoscopy • F/u yearly for 3 years with Hx, BP, U/A, cytology
Hematuria (<4rbc/phpf) is normal Strenuous exercise can induce hematuria Hematuria accompanied by proteinuria usually represents a renal source Only RBC casts or dysmorphic RBCs reliably localize hematuria to the kidney Microheme is the most common presentation of sickle trait HematuriaPearls