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Hematuria Resident Lecture
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Hematuria Diagnosis: presence of ≥ 3 RBCs on at least 2 separate urine samples Gross: as little as 1cc can visibly change urine Microscopic: detected by UA if there is at least 1-2 RBC/hpf Because there are false positives urine microscopy is necessary to confirm presence of RBCs
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Evaluation of hematuria
History taking is VERY important Risk factors Smoking history Occupational exposure to chemicals or dyes (benzenes or aromatic amines) History of gross hematuria Age >40 years History of urologic disorder or disease History of irritative voiding symptoms History of urinary tract infection Analgesic abuse History of pelvic irradiation Systemic symptoms, exposures, exercise, infections, BPH, stones, dysuria, etc.
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Evaluation of hematuria
Urine microscopy confirms RBCs present? Gross v. microscopic hematuria? Proteinuria present, how much? Glomerular v. nonglomerular? Glomerular: RBC casts, dysmorphic RBCs, proteinuria (typically > 1 gm), coca-cola color Nonglomerular: nondysmorphic RBCs, clot formation (very rare in glomerular bleeding) Indeterminate: presence of less than < 30 % dysmorphic RBCs, Proteinuria < 1gm, no RBC casts Renal U/S results?
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Etiology of Glomerular hematuria
Glomerulonephritis Systemic disease (autoimmune) Vasculitis – (WG, MPA, CS, HSP) Lupus TMA Scleroderma Hereditary/Other Alport’s TBM Infection-associated GN Nutcracker syndrome Loin-pain hematuria
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Evaluation of nonglomerular hematuria - LUT
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Imaging studies for nonglomerular hematuria
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Outcome 1% of older patients with an initially negative evaluation will, at three to four years, have a detectable urinary tract malignancy In high risk patients, f/u cytology at 6, 12, 24, 36 months, consider repeat cystoscopy annually for persistent hematuria
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