
How to use Urine Electrolytes for assesment & diagnosis of Kidney Disorders?
A great article in
@CJASN
https://cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/14/2/306
Summary of the article is in this
#MedEd #FOAMed #NephPearls

Urine Na is used for:

Assessment of effective circulatory volume

Differentiation of Pre-renal Azotemia vs. ATN

Spot Urine Na

Urine Na < 15 mEq/L suggests

effective circulatory volume BUT the caveat is:

Spot Urine Na is dependent on the amount of ‘water’ in the urine

Hence spot Urine Na can be

in the setting of water diuresis &

always mean

volume

This is why we use Fractional Excretion of Sodium: FeNa
FeNa = (UNa x PCr/ PNa x UCr) x 100

FeNa provides a measure of Urine Na handling independent of urine concentration (meaning independent of the ‘water’ in the urine)

FeNa is used to differentiate b/w Pre-Renal Azotemia & ATN

FeNa < 1% suggests Pre-renal Azotemia & hence volume-responsive whereas a

FeNa suggests ATN and hence not volume-responsive

But FeNa is NOT always reliable in making this distinction

Limitations of FeNa:

There are conditions that cause ATN but also cause intense renal vasoconstriction resulting in

filtered load of Na, resulting in

FeNa despite presence of ATN


Sepsis

IV contrast

NSAIDs

Rhandomyolysis

FeNa can also be misleadingly

in the following conditions despite presence of ATN:

CHF

Cirrhosis

Extensive burns

Intense neurohumoral activation =
Low FeNa

FeNa can be misleadingly

despite

effective circulatory volume in the setting of diuretic use (due to natriureis):

In this situation, Fractional Excretion of Urea (FeUrea) can be used

FeUrea
= (Ur Urea x Pcr/ P Urea x Ucr)x 100
= < 35% suggests

volume

volume ->

prox. tubular water & urea reabsorption

FeUrea

So w/ distal diuretic use, loop or thiazides, but NOT w/ proximal diuretic use, FeUrea can be of help

FeNa can be misleadingly

despite

volume when:


volume is accompanied by

in non-reabsorbable anions in urine, such as HCO3-, as HCO3- is excreted in urine paired w/ Na+

Use Urine Cl and NOT FeNa to assess volume status in met. alkalosis

Urine Chloride (Cl) excretion mirrors Urine Na excretion & hence both move in the same direction in response to changes in the effective circulatory volume

Except when volume changes are accompanied by Acid-Base disorders

If Urine Na to Urine Cl ratio is >1.6 in the setting of

volume then:

An accompanying anion is causing obligatory Na loss in the urine despite an appropriately

Urine Cl in response to neurohumoral activation due to

effective circulatory volume

If UNa to Ur. Cl ratio is >1.6 in the setting of

circulatory volume then:

Check Urine pH: this will help identify the Non-reabsorbable Anion causing the obligatory Na loss

Ur. pH 7-8 = Bicarbonaturia

Ur. pH < 6 = Ketoanions or Drugs



If the Urine Na to Urine Cl ratio is
< 0.7 in the setting of

effective circulatory volume then that suggests:

An accompanying cation in the urine causing obligatory Cl loss

Eg.

ammonium excretion in urine as it is excreted as ammonium chloride

Urine Potassium (K)

In Hypokalemia,
Step 1:

determine if K loss is renal or extra-renal

Check Spot Urine K
< 5-15 mEq/L = extra-renal K loss
> 40 mEq/L = renal loss

But Spot Urine K can be misleading as it can vary w/ urine concentration

To overcome this limitation of Spot Urine K one can use the following:

Urine K to Urine Creatine ratio

Ratio of < 13 mEq/g
OR

Ratio of < 2.5 mEq/mmol
Both indicate extra-renal K loss

Once it is determined that hypokalemia is due to renal or extra-renal loss based on the:
Urine K to Urine Cr ratio then the next steps are:
Step 2:

Check BP & assess effective circulatory volume

Step 3:

Plasma HCO3

Step 4:

Urine Chloride

Urine Anion Gap & Urine Osmolar Gap in Metabolic Acidosis

In normal anion gap matabolic acidosis, determine if the source of the acidosis is renal or extra-renal

Calculate Urine Anion Gap (UAG):
(Urine Na + Urine K) - Urine Cl

Positive UAG = source of met. acidosis is renal

Negative UAG = source of met. acidosis is extra-renal

Why?
Because

urine ammonium excretion by the kidney in the setting of metabolic acidosis means that the kidney is NOT getting rid of the acid

Why is Urine Anion Gap positive in the setting of

urine ammonium excretion?
Because ammonium is excreted as ammonium chloride, now recall the UAG equation:
(Urine Na + Urine K) - Urine Cl
So

ammonium excretion in urine =

Urine Cl = Positive UAG

Urine Anion Gap can also be misleading - Why?

Recall that in the UAG equation we are only accounting for Urine Na, K & Cl

So presence of ANY unmeasured ions (besides Na, K, Cl) can be misleading:

Ketoacids

Na Hippurate

D-lactate

When UAG is not reliable to assess urine ammonium excretion then use:
Ur. Osmolal Gap
Ur. Osm. Gap >100 mOsm/kg=

ammonium excretion= Met. acidosis cause is extra-renal
Limitations: Ur. Osm. Gap can be

due to non-ammonium solutes (mannitol, alcohols)

This

is a review of how to use the following urine chemistries to assess & diagnose kidney disorders

Urine Sodium

Fractional excretion of Na

Fractional excretion of Urea

Urine Chloride

Urine Potassium

Urine Anion Gap

Urine Osmolar Gap
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