Menu

An expert resource for medical professionals
Provided FREE as a service to women’s health

The Alliance for
Global Women’s Medicine
A worldwide fellowship of health professionals working together to
promote, advocate for and enhance the Welfare of Women everywhere

An Educational Platform for FIGO

The Global Library of Women’s Medicine
Clinical guidance and resourses

A vast range of expert online resources. A FREE and entirely CHARITABLE site to support women’s healthcare professionals

The Global Academy of Women’s Medicine
Teaching, research and Diplomates Association

Laboratory Tests

This section provides detailed information on a wide range of laboratory tests relevant to women's medicine

A rapid reference

24-hour Urine for Protein and Creatinine

Creatinine is a product of muscle metabolism. It is produced at a nearly constant rate and is excreted in the urine.

Because of its constant rate of production, the amount of creatinine in the urine is an indirect measurement of kidney function (glomerular filtration rate).

If kidney function is significantly reduced, the urine creatinine will fall. With more severe degrees of kidney failure, the serum creatinine will eventually rise.

A 24-hour collection of urine is the most accurate way to assess renal function with creatinine. A blood (serum) creatinine is also measured during this time and used to calculated the volume of urine needed to "clear" the measured amount of creatinine from the blood and into the urine. This is called the "creatinine clearance".

Vigorous exercise or muscular trauma occurring during the collection will cause an increased amount of creatinine in the blood and may lead to false creatinine clearance results.


Serum proteins are normally extracted from urine prior to it being released from the kidney. 

Because the renal glomeruli are imperfect, normal individuals may occasionally have "trace" amounts of protein in their urine. Larger amounts (1+ or more) are considered abnormal and may reflect an underlying kidney problem.

Urine protein can be measured on any urine sample (a "spot urine"), but the most accurate measure is with a 24-hour collection of urine.

During pregnancy, due to the increased renal blood flow, some additional protein may be lost in the urine. This increased protein loss should not normally be in quantities exceeding 300 mg in 24 hours. If more than 300 mg in 24 hours is found, this may signal the development of pre-eclampsia.

Normal Values*

Urine Creatinine mg/24 hours
 mmol/24 hours
Men <150  <13
Women <250  <22

 

Creatinine Clearance ml/min
Men 70-130
Women 91-130
Pregnancy 120-160

 

Urine Protein   
24 hours 10140 mg/24 hours
Spot Urine 1014 mg/L
Spot Urine Dipstick "Negative"

 

Urine Protein (Pregnancy)  
24 hours <300 mg/24 hours
Spot Urine <300 mg/L
Spot Urine Dipstick "Negative" or "Trace"

*These are general values taken from a variety of sources. The actual normal values may vary from lab to lab and from one type of testing protocol to another.

 

 

Source: Operational Medicine 2001,  Health Care in Military Settings, NAVMED P-5139, May 1, 2001, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Department of the Navy, 2300 E Street NW, Washington DC, 20372-5300, USA