HEMATURIA
HEMATURIA: Excerpt from Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care
Using the anatomic approach, the physician can arrive at most of
the causes of hematuria (Table 35). One need only visualize the
urinary tract and proceed from the kidney on down to get a differential
list. Let us apply the mnemonic VINDICATE to the kidney.
V—Vascular diseases make one think of embolic glomerulonephritis, renal vein
thrombosis, and (subacute bacterial endocarditis [SBE]).
I—Infectious causes of hematuria are pyelonephritis (infrequently)
and renal TB.
N—Neoplasms that may present with hematuria are hypernephromas and
papillomas and carcinomas of the renal pelvis. Wilms tumors present with
hematuria less frequently.
HEMATURIA
|
| V | I | N | D |
|
| Vascular | Inflammatory | Neoplasm | Degenerative and |
|
| | | | Deficiency |
|
|
Kidney |
Embolic glomerulonephritis Renal vein thrombosis Subacute bacterial endocarditis |
Pyelonephritis Renal tuberculosis |
HypernephromasPapillomas Carcinomas Wilms tumor | sadf |
| |
| |
| |
|
Ureters |
|
|
Papilloma | |
| |
| |
|
Bladder |
|
Cystitis Hunner ulcer Foreign body |
Papilloma Transitional cell carcinoma | |
| |
|
Prostate |
|
Prostatitis |
Carcinoma | |
|
Urethra |
|
Infections of urethra (e.g., gonorrhea) |
Neoplasm | |
|
D—Degenerative diseases rarely present with hematuria as in other
organ systems.
I—Intoxicants such as sulfa drugs (that lead to nephrocalcinosis),
mercury poisoning, and blood transfusion reactions are common causes of
gross or microscopic hematuria.
C—Congenital lesions such as polycystic kidneys and medullary sponge
kidneys cause hematuria and predispose to stones and infections that may
present with hematuria.
A—Autoimmune conditions such as acute and chronic
glomerulonephritis, Goodpasture disease, Wegener midline granulomatosis, and
lupus erythematosus commonly present with hematuria.
T—Trauma to any organ causes hemorrhages, and the kidney is no
exception. Hematuria after automobile or other accidents should signal the
need for hospitalization, intravenous pyelogram (IVP), and close observation
of vital signs. Hematuria may present with a crush injury to any muscle or a
burn.
E—Endocrine-metabolic diseases caused by stones. Most calcium stones
are not caused by hyperparathyroidism, but it should always be considered a
possibility. Urate stones are usually caused by gout, and cystine stones are
always associated with congenital cystinuria.
Ureter.
Stones, papillomas, and congenital defects (contributing
to stones) are the most likely causes here.
Bladder.
Vascular disease is infrequently a cause, but cystitis
(especially acute or “honeymoon” type) is a common cause. Stones,
neoplasms (papillomas and transitional cell cardinomas), and foreign bodies
are the next most likely causes. Trauma should not be forgotten, especially
because of the numerous instances of various instruments being introduced
into the bladder.
Prostate.
Neoplasms of the prostate occasionally cause
hematuria, but most other etiologic conditions (prostatitis) are rarely
associated with gross or microscopic hematuria.
HEMATURIA
|
| I | C | A | T | E |
| Intoxication | Congenital | Autoimmune Allergic | Trauma | Endocrine and |
|
| | | | Metabolic |
|
|
Sulfa drugs Mercury poisoning Blood transfusion reaction |
Polycystic kidney Medullary sponge kidney Congenital lesion |
Acute and chronic glomerulonephritisGoodpasture disease Wegener midline granulomatosis Lupus erythematosus |
Crush injury to muscle Burn Laceration |
Stones (uric acid, calcium phosphate, cystine) |
| |
|
| Congenital bands (e.g., aberrant vessels) |
|
|
Stones (see above) |
| |
|
| |
|
Ruptured bladder (e.g., from instruments) |
Stones (see above) |
| |
| |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
Stones (see above) |
| |
|
Urethra.
Stones, neoplasms, and infections of the urethra may
all cause hematuria, but very infrequently.
Using biochemistry
as the basic chemistry, do not forget the
coagulation disorders that may cause hematuria. Thus hematuria is often
found in idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura and in almost any disorder in
which the platelet count drops below 40,000 cells/mm2. Hemophiliacs may
present with hematuria. Patients given too much warfarin (Coumadin) will
often get hematuria. Fibrinolysins and afibrinogenemia will also cause
hematuria.
From this exercise, it should be evident that arriving at the causes of
hematuria is not difficult if one visualizes the anatomy of the urinary tree
and then considers each etiologic category in this light.
Approach to the Diagnosis
The clinical picture will point to the diagnosis in many cases. If
there is a history of abdominal trauma, a contusion or laceration of the
kidney or bladder should be suspected. Massive trauma anywhere prompts a
tentative diagnosis of crush syndrome. Purpura or bleeding from other sites
suggests a coagulation disorder. Severe colicky pain in the abdomen suggests
kidney stone. A long history of hypertension suggests polycystic kidneys, renal
artery stenosis, or glomerulonephritis. A history of fever and rheumatic
valvular disease suggests SBE with renal embolism. Painless hematuria in an
otherwise healthy looking adult suggests neoplasm, whereas painful hematuria
with frequency and dysuria suggests cystitis. Hematuria and a flank mass
would make a neoplasm or polycystic kidney likely.
The initial workup should include a CBC, urinalysis, urine culture,
chemistry panel, flat plate of the abdomen to assess the presence of stones
and kidney size, and personal examination of the urinary sediment. If a
renal calculus is suspected, an IVP is ordered immediately and a urologist
consulted. A three-glass test will help to localize the site of the
bleeding. If there is blood in the initial specimen only, the urethra is
probably the site of bleeding. If the blood is primarily in the final
specimen, the bladder is most likely the site of bleeding. Equal blood
discoloration in all specimens points to a renal lesion.
If renal TB is suspected, an acid-fast bacillus (AFB) smear and culture is
done. If collagen disease is suspected, an ANA analysis and
anti–double-strand DNA antibody titer is ordered.
If a renal carcinoma is suspected, a CT scan of the abdomen is probably the
best study to order, but the advice of a urologist ought to be sought.
Ultrasonography is useful in differentiating cysts from tumors. If a bladder
neoplasm is suspected, cystoscopy will be done. If renal artery embolism or
thrombosis is suspected, renal angiography may need to be done to clearly
make the diagnosis.
Other Useful Tests
-
Chest x-ray (TB, Goodpasture disease)
- Tuberculin test (TB)
- Strain urine for stones
- Serum complement (acute glomerulonephritis, lupus)
- Anti-streptolysin O (ASO) titer (acute glomerulonephritis)
- Addis count (glomerulonephritis)
- Blood cultures (SBE)
- Coagulation studies (hemophilia, collagen disease, allergic
purpura)
- Plasma haptoglobins (hemolytic anemias)
- Coomb test (hemolytic anemias)
- Platelet count (thrombocytopenic purpura)
- Renal biopsy (chronic nephritis, neoplasm)
- Surgical exploration
CASE PRESENTATION #42
A 31-year-old white man presents to the emergency room with severe right
flank pain and a specimen of bloody urine. He is begging for a shot to
relieve the pain.
Pictures
Book Source Details
- Book Title: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care
- Author(s): R. Douglas Collins MD, FACP
- Year of Publication: 2007
- Copyright Details: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care, Copyright © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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Copyright notice for book excerpts: Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.
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