Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
and how to assess
it
Abi Berger BMJ
The gold standard test for assessing renal function is the
glomerular filtration rate.1 Measuring this rate is a
laborious process but is most useful for assessing renal function in
patients whose serum creatinine concentration is at the upper limit of normal or in patients who develop early renal impairment secondary to
treatment with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, lithium, or
angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. The normal range is 80-120 ml/min.
A useful and practical surrogate marker for the glomerular filtration
rate is creatinine clearance. Creatinine clearance measures the ability
of the kidneys to clear creatinine from the circulation into the urine
over a period of 24 hours. This is a much more accessible measure of
renal function, but because the serum creatinine concentration is
influenced by muscle mass and age (it increases with muscle bulk and
decreases with age), creatinine clearance rates must be interpreted for
the individual patient. Body builders have a tendency for high
creatinine concentrations while frail elderly women may have
misleadlingly low concentrations.
Most clinicians use serum creatinine concentrations as the most
practical measure of renal function. Normal creatinine concentrations can be obtained even when the glomerular filtration rate has dropped by
50%, however, so it is fairly insensitive as an indicator of early
renal insufficiency. Once serum creatinine concentrations are abnormal
it can be assumed that there is measurable renal impairment (that is,
more than half the filtering capacity of the kidneys has been lost).
Measuring the blood urea concentration alone also has limitations
because it is influenced by protein metabolism, the state of
dehydration, and the use of steroids, in addition to renal function.
Thus patients with renal impairment can have relatively normal blood
urea concentrations if they are grossly malnourished and not eating.
The Cockroft-Gault formula (mentioned in the paper) is a way of
calculating the glomerular filtration rate without undertaking a 24 hour urine collection. The formula factors in age and body mass
together with serum creatinine concentrations in an attempt to
standardise the serum results and to be able to compare one person's
renal function with another. It tends to be used more in research
settings than in routine clinical practice as a way of improving the
quality of data on renal function.
References
| 1. | Cameron J, Greger R. Renal function and testing of function. In: Davison A, Cameron J, Grunfeld J-P, Kerr D, Ritz E, Winearls C, eds. Oxford textbook of clinical nephrology. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford Medical Publications, 1998. |
Read all Rapid Responses