Structures complete urinalysis interpretation with microscopy correlation and clinical significance. Use when interpreting UA results, correlating microscopy findings, or evaluating renal function markers.
Structures complete urinalysis interpretation with microscopy correlation and clinical significance.
Urinalysis is one of the most frequently ordered laboratory tests, providing critical information for diagnosing urinary tract infections, renal disease, diabetes, liver disease, and systemic conditions. Despite its ubiquity, urinalysis interpretation is frequently oversimplified, leading to missed diagnoses (nephrotic-range proteinuria attributed to "benign" proteinuria, dysmorphic RBCs indicating glomerular disease missed on microscopy, casts overlooked in a spun sediment). The CLSI GP16-A3 guideline and the European Confederation of Laboratory Medicine consensus provide standardized urinalysis methodology.
CAP accreditation (Urinalysis checklist, URN series) requires documented procedures for dipstick and microscopy, quality control of reagent strips, and competency assessment for personnel performing microscopic examination. CLIA classifies provider-performed microscopy (PPM) as a distinct complexity category with specific requirements. Automated urine analyzers are increasingly replacing manual microscopy, but correlation and reflex manual review remain essential for abnormal findings.
Evaluate the macroscopic and chemical strip parameters:
| Parameter | Normal | Abnormal Finding | Common Causes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Color | Pale to dark yellow | Red/brown: hematuria, hemoglobinuria, myoglobinuria. Orange: bilirubin, pyridium. Green: pseudomonas, methylene blue | Medications, diet, pathology |
| Clarity | Clear | Turbid: WBCs, bacteria, crystals, mucus, fat (lipiduria) | Infection, contamination, renal disease |
| Specific gravity | 1.005-1.030 | < 1.005: dilute (diabetes insipidus, overhydration). > 1.030: concentrated (dehydration, SIADH, contrast) | Hydration, renal concentrating ability |
| pH | 5.0-8.0 | < 5.0: metabolic acidosis, high-protein diet. > 8.0: UTI (urease-producing organisms), RTA, old specimen | Acid-base status, bacteria, diet |
| Protein | Negative | Trace-3+: glomerular or tubular disease, overflow proteinuria, orthostatic | Glomerulonephritis, nephrotic syndrome, diabetes |
| Glucose | Negative | Positive: diabetes (glucose > 180 mg/dL), renal glycosuria, pregnancy | Diabetes mellitus, tubular dysfunction |
| Ketones | Negative | Positive: diabetic ketoacidosis, starvation, alcoholic ketoacidosis | Metabolic states |
| Blood | Negative | Positive: hematuria, hemoglobinuria, myoglobinuria | UTI, stones, glomerular disease, trauma |
| Leukocyte esterase (LE) | Negative | Positive: pyuria (suggests UTI or inflammation) | UTI, interstitial nephritis, contamination |
| Nitrite | Negative | Positive: bacteriuria (gram-negative bacteria reducing nitrate) | UTI with Enterobacterales |
| Bilirubin | Negative | Positive: conjugated hyperbilirubinemia | Hepatobiliary disease |
| Urobilinogen | 0.1-1.0 EU/dL | Elevated: hemolysis, hepatocellular disease. Absent: obstructive jaundice | Liver disease, hemolysis |
Critical dipstick combinations:
Perform standardized microscopy (CLSI GP16-A3):
Preparation: Centrifuge 12 mL at 400g for 5 minutes; resuspend sediment in 0.5-1.0 mL supernatant.
| Element | Reporting | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Red blood cells | Per HPF (0-2 normal) | > 5/HPF: hematuria. Dysmorphic (acanthocytes) = glomerular origin. Isomorphic = lower tract |
| White blood cells | Per HPF (0-5 normal) | > 5/HPF: pyuria (UTI, interstitial nephritis, STI, renal TB). WBC clumps suggest pyelonephritis |
| Squamous epithelial cells | Per LPF | > 5/LPF: specimen contamination. Suggests recollection needed |
| Renal tubular epithelial (RTE) cells | Per HPF | > 1/HPF: tubular injury (ATN, drug toxicity, transplant rejection) |
| Transitional epithelial cells | Per HPF | Clumps may suggest urothelial pathology; > 5/HPF abnormal |
| Bacteria | None to few | Moderate/many with WBCs: UTI. Bacteria without WBCs: contamination or asymptomatic bacteriuria |
| Yeast | None | Candida: may indicate candidiasis in immunocompromised or vaginal contamination |
| Cast Type | Composition | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Hyaline | Tamm-Horsfall protein only | Normal in small numbers; increased with dehydration, exercise, diuretics |
| Granular (fine) | Degenerated cellular material | Non-specific; may indicate early tubular disease |
| Granular (coarse) | Advanced degeneration | Tubular disease, stasis |
| Waxy | End-stage degenerated cast | Chronic kidney disease, prolonged stasis |
| RBC casts | RBCs within Tamm-Horsfall matrix | PATHOGNOMONIC for glomerulonephritis (IgA nephropathy, lupus nephritis, post-infectious GN) |
| WBC casts | WBCs within matrix | Pyelonephritis, interstitial nephritis, lupus nephritis |
| RTE casts | Renal tubular epithelial cells | Acute tubular necrosis, nephrotoxic injury |
| Fatty casts | Fat droplets (Maltese cross on polarization) | Nephrotic syndrome |
| Crystal | pH Association | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Calcium oxalate (envelope/dumbbell) | Acidic | Common; ethylene glycol poisoning if massive and acute |
| Uric acid (rhomboid/rosette) | Acidic | Gout, tumor lysis syndrome, high-purine diet |
| Triple phosphate (coffin lid) | Alkaline | UTI with urease-producing organisms (Proteus) |
| Cystine (hexagonal) | Acidic | ALWAYS pathologic — cystinuria |
| Tyrosine/leucine (needles/spheroids) | Acidic | Severe liver disease |
Correlate dipstick and microscopy findings into a clinical interpretation:
Infection pattern: LE+, nitrite+, WBC > 5/HPF, bacteria moderate/many, +/- WBC casts (pyelonephritis). Glomerular disease pattern: Protein 2-3+, blood+, dysmorphic RBCs, RBC casts, +/- fatty casts (nephrotic component). Tubular injury pattern: Low specific gravity, RTE cells, RTE casts, granular casts, mild proteinuria (predominantly tubular proteins). Nephrotic syndrome pattern: Protein 3-4+, fatty casts (Maltese cross), oval fat bodies, waxy casts, lipiduria. Contamination pattern: Squamous epithelial cells > 5/LPF, bacteria without WBCs, mixed flora.
Recommend follow-up testing based on urinalysis findings: