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    Blood test information

    Creatinine (24-hour) Urine Test

    Measures total creatinine excretion in 24-hour urine to assess kidney filtration.

    Result: 2-3 days Code: 82570*2
    252 

    Description of the urine Analysis: 

    Urine Creatinine (24-hour) measures the total amount of creatinine excreted by the kidneys over a full day. Creatinine is a metabolic waste product formed from the breakdown of creatine phosphate in muscle tissue. Because it is produced at a remarkably constant rate and primarily filtered by the kidneys with minimal reabsorption, the total 24-hour output is the most reliable indicator of the kidneys’ filtering capacity. Unlike a random sample, the 24-hour collection eliminates the variables of hydration and time-of-day fluctuations, providing the physician with the necessary data to calculate the “Clearance” — the volume of blood the kidneys can clear of creatinine per minute.

     

    What Does the Test Represent?

    • Goal: To measure the total daily excretion of creatinine to assess the Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR).
    • Main Application: Detecting chronic kidney disease (CKD), monitoring the progression of renal failure, and adjusting dosages for medications that are cleared by the kidneys.
    • Method: Kinetic Jaffe method or enzymatic colorimetric assay.

    Collection Recommendations (General)

    • Timing: Exact 24-hour period. Start in the morning: discard the first void, then collect every subsequent drop for exactly 24 hours, including the final void the following morning at the same start time.
    • Hygiene: Proper cleansing of the genital area before each collection to maintain sample purity.
    • Material: A large (2–3 liter) collection container provided by the laboratory.
    • Specific Rules: The sample must be kept refrigerated at +2–8°C during the entire 24-hour period. Inaccurate recording of the total volume (diuresis) is the most common cause of misleading results.

    What Can Affect the Results?

    • Factors Altering Levels: Muscle mass (athletes will have significantly higher levels; elderly or malnourished patients will have lower levels); a diet very high in cooked red meat during the collection period; severe dehydration or intense fever.
    • Medications: Certain drugs (like Cimetidine or some antibiotics) can interfere with the tubular secretion of creatinine.

    When to Take the Test?

    • Recommendations: As part of a “Creatinine Clearance” test (usually paired with a blood test), when monitoring diabetic nephropathy, or when general kidney function markers in the blood (BUN/Creatinine) show abnormalities.
    • Preparation: Avoid strenuous physical activity and limit red meat intake for 24 hours before and during the collection.

    How to Interpret the Results? 

    The interpretation of 24-hour Urine Creatinine is strictly a clinical analytical task for a physician. A high or low value on the report is not a diagnosis on its own. A doctor must interpret this number by calculating the clearance rate relative to your age, sex, height, and weight. For example, a “normal” result for a bodybuilder might be “abnormal” for a sedentary person. Only a specialist can “fine-tune” the assessment to determine if your kidneys are functioning at full capacity or if there is an underlying decline in filtration efficiency that requires medical intervention.

     

    Possible Further Investigations

    • Serum Creatinine (Blood): Required to calculate the Creatinine Clearance ratio.
    • Urine Protein/Albumin (24-hour): Often measured simultaneously to assess the “leakiness” of the filter.
    • Cystatin C: An alternative blood marker for kidney function not affected by muscle mass.
    • Renal Ultrasound: To visualize the size and structure of the kidneys.

    When Does the Next Step Make Sense? 

    If the 24-hour creatinine output is lower than expected for your body type, the next step is a formal consultation to investigate the cause of reduced filtration. Early detection through this 24-hour window allows for the implementation of kidney-protective strategies before significant damage occurs.

    👉 If necessary, you can discuss the test results with a specialist, such as a nephrologist (Doctors – TAMC), urologist (Doctors – TAMC).

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