Hematuria was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.

To view this entire topic, please or purchase a subscription.

Explore 5-Minute Clinical Consult - view these FREE monographs:

5-Minute Clinical Consult

-- The first section of this topic is shown below --

Basics

Description

Blood or RBCs in the urine:

  • Gross (visible) or microscopic (nonvisible)
  • Symptomatic or asymptomatic

Epidemiology


Prevalence
  • Microscopic hematuria in school-aged children: 0.5–2%
  • Microscopic hematuria in asymptomatic adults varies from 0.19–21%, depending on population studied (1,2).

Risk Factors

  • Smoking
  • Occupational exposures (dyes, rubber or tire manufacturing)
  • Analgesic abuse (e.g., phenacetin)
  • Medications (e.g., cyclophosphamide)
  • Pelvic irradiation
  • Chronic infection, especially with calculi
  • Recent upper respiratory tract infection
  • Positive family history of renal diseases (stones, glomerulonephritis)
  • Underlying primary renal disorder

Etiology

  • Trauma:
    • Exercise-induced (resolves with rest)
    • Abdominal trauma or pelvic fracture with renal, bladder, or ureteral injury
    • Iatrogenic from abdominal or pelvic surgery; chronic indwelling catheters
    • Foreign body, physical/sexual abuse
  • Neoplasms:
    • Malignancies: 30% of adult patients with painless, gross hematuria and ~10% with painless microscopic hematuria have a malignancy (1).
    • Benign tumors
    • Endometriosis of the urinary tract (suspect in females with cyclic hematuria)
  • Inflammatory causes:
    • UTI: Most common cause of hematuria in adults
    • Renal diseases: Radiation nephritis and cystitis, acute/chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis (due to drugs, infections, systemic disease)
    • Glomerular disease:
      • Goodpasture syndrome (antiglomerular basement membrane disease; autoimmune; associated pulmonary hemorrhage)
      • IGA nephropathy
      • Lupus nephritis
      • Henoch-Schönlein purpura
      • Membranoproliferative, poststreptococcal, or rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis
      • Wegener granulomatosis
    • Endocarditis/Visceral abscesses
    • Other infections: Schistosomiasis, TB, syphilis
  • Metabolic causes:
    • Stones (85% have hematuria):
      • Hypercalciuria: A common cause of both gross and microscopic hematuria in children
      • Hyperuricosuria
  • Congenital/Familial causes:
    • Cystic disease: Polycystic kidney disease, solitary renal cyst
    • Benign familial hematuria or thin basement membrane nephropathy (autosomal dominant)
    • Alport syndrome (X-linked in 85%; hematuria, proteinuria, hearing loss, corneal abnormalities) (3)
    • Fabry disease (X-linked recessive inborn error of metabolism; vascular kidney disease)
    • Nail-patella syndrome (autosomal dominant; nail and patella hypoplasia; hematuria in 33%)
    • Renal tubular acidosis type 1 (autosomal dominant or autoimmune)
  • Hematologic causes:
    • Bleeding dyscrasias (e.g., hemophilia)
    • Sickle cell anemia/trait (renal papillary necrosis)
  • Vascular causes:
    • Hemangioma
    • Arteriovenous malformations (rare)
    • Nutcracker syndrome: Compression of left renal vein and subsequent renal parenchymal congestion
    • Renal artery/vein thrombosis
    • Arterial emboli to kidney
  • Chemical causes:
    • Nephrotoxins: Aminoglycosides, cyclosporine
    • Other drugs: Analgesics, oral contraceptives, Chinese herbs
  • Obstruction:
    • Strictures or posterior urethral valves
    • Hydronephrosis from any cause
    • Benign prostatic hyperplasia: Rule out other causes of hematuria.
  • Other causes: Loin pain hematuria (most often in young women on oral contraceptives)

-- To view the remaining sections of this topic, please or purchase a subscription --