Urinalysis and Body Fluids: Unit 3
Urinalysis and Body Fluids: Unit 3
Urinalysis and Body Fluids: Unit 3
Unit 3
Chemical Examination of Urine
Insoluble bilirubin
Goes to liver converted to water soluble bilirubin by the
liver parenchymal (hepatocytes) cells
conjugated with glucuronic acid
Forms bilirubin diglucuronide (also called direct bilirubin,
conjugated bilirubin, or water soluble bilirubin)
Wikipedia
Jaundice types
Wikipedia
Jaundice
Hemolytic jaundice
Excessive hemolysis of red cells (sickle cell anemia, cold
agglutinins, malaria, burns, mechanical heart valves, etc.
Liver functions normal conjugates and eliminates bilirubin
Too much bilirubin produced liver can't clear blood resulting
in a build up of indirect, insoluble bilirubin
Jaundice
Obstructive jaundice
Causes some type of blockage (Gall stones, Tumor, Edema)
Liver conjugates but can't excrete
Conjugated bilirubin regurgitated into blood
Conjugated (direct) bilirubin found in urine
No urobilinogen found in urine
No urobilin in feces
Jaundice
Obstructive jaundice clinical picture
Positive urine bilirubin
Negative urine urobilinogen
Negative-trace fecal urobilinogen
stools are a grayish, chalky, clay color.
Jaundice
Hepatocellular jaundice
Malfunction of liver cells ie. viral hepatitis, cirrhosis,
etc.
Both urobilinogen and bilirubin (direct) found in urine
More sensitive
As little as 0.05mg/dL
More specific
Less interference
Generally easier to read
acid
Bilirubin + diazide azobilirubin
Technique errors
Reading after the prescribed time
atypical color reactions produced by:
Indican
Metabolites of etodolac (Lodine)
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine)
Metabolites of phenazopyridine
Elevated in
Liver disease
Intestinal obstruction
Hemolytic anemia
Hemolysis
Urine urobilinogen
p-aminosalicylic acid
sulfonamides,
p-aminobenzoic
Prophobilionogen
May use Watson-Schwartz test to differentiate
** any dye or substance that will stain the dipstick pad
Phenazopyridine ( Azo-Gesic, pyridium etc.)
Urine urobilinogen: false decrease
A true absence of urobilinogen is not detectable.
Loss of intestinal bacteria
The conjugated bilirubin would not be converted to
urobilinogen
patient taking broadspectrum antibiotics
Biliary obstruction
No bilirubin getting into intestines
Urobilinogen testing
Porphyrins chemical intermediates in the synthesis of
cytochromes (such as hemoglobin, myoglobin, etc.)
Porphyrias inherited or acquired enzyme deficiency that
result in overproduction of a heme precursor resulting in build
up in the blood, feces and urine
***Lead poisoning most common cause of acquired porphyria
Reference Listing
Please credit those whose work and pictures I have used
throughout these prsentations.
Lillian Mundt & Kristy Shanahan, Graffs Textbook of Urinalysis
and Body Fluids, 2nd Ed.
Susan Strassinger & Marjorie Di Lorenzo, Urinalysis and Body
Fluids, 5th Ed.
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
www.wikibedia.org