Renal Function Tests 1-25458
Renal Function Tests 1-25458
– How is it measured?
– Importance
Nephron - functional unit of the kidney
• Glomerular function
– Ultrafiltration of blood
• Tubular function
– Reabsorption
– Secretion
A. Routine tests
B. Glomerular function test
C. Tubular function test
Renal Function Tests (RFT)
A. Routine clinical tests (screening tests):
1. Measurement of markers of kidney function in blood
– urea and creatinine
2. Complete urine analysis
3. Measurement of serum electrolytes
• Rate of excretion
– Renal function
– Renal perfusion (renal blood flow)
Increased serum urea levels
• 120mL/min
• Estimation of GFR is the best overall measure of kidney
function
Clearance = U X V
P
U: concentration of substance in urine
P: concentration of substance in plasma
V: Volume of urine produced per minute (ml/min)
Disadvantages:
1. It has to be injected intravenously at a constant rate
2. Measurement in the laboratory is difficult
Creatinine clearance
• Creatinine is the substance most commonly used to
measure GFR
• It meets almost all the criteria
It is excreted mainly by the kidney
It has a constant blood level
It is freely filtered at the glomerulus
It is secreted to a small but variable extent by the renal
tubules
Clearance = U X V
P
Estimated GFR (eGFR)
GFR can also be estimated directly from serum creatinine
(without having to measure urine creatinine)
by the use of formulae such as:
– Endogenous production
– Completely filtered
– Reabsorbed and metabolised by PCT
– Not secreted