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Microalbumin Urine Test
Test Overview
A microalbumin test checks urine for the presence of a protein
called
albumin. Albumin is normally found in the blood and
filtered by the
kidneys. When the
kidneys are working properly, albumin is not present
in the urine. However, when the kidneys are damaged, small amounts of albumin
leak into the urine. This condition is called microalbuminuria.
Microalbuminuria is most often caused by kidney damage from
diabetes. However, many other conditions can lead to
kidney damage, such as
high blood pressure,
heart failure,
cirrhosis, or
systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). If early kidney
damage is not treated, larger amounts of albumin and protein may leak into the
urine. This condition is called macroalbuminuria or proteinuria. When the
kidneys spill protein, it can mean serious kidney damage is present. This can
lead to
chronic kidney disease. A microalbumin urine test can
be done on a sample of urine collected randomly (usually after the first time
you urinate in the morning), a sample collected over a 24-hour period, or a
sample collected over a specific period of time, such as 4 hours or overnight.
Why It Is Done
A microalbumin urine test is done to check for protein (albumin) in
the urine. Early detection may change treatment in an effort to preserve as
much kidney function as possible.
How To Prepare
You do not need to do anything before having this test.
How It Is Done
For a random urine test, you will provide a clean-catch midstream
urine sample. A morning urine sample gives the best information about
microalbumin levels.
Clean-catch midstream one-time urine collection
This collection method prevents contamination of the
sample.
- Wash your hands to make sure they are clean
before collecting the urine.
- If the collection cup has a lid,
remove it carefully and set it down with the inner surface up. Do not touch the
inside of the cup with your fingers.
- Clean the area around your
genitals.
- A man should pull back the foreskin, if
present, and clean the head of his penis thoroughly with medicated towelettes
or swabs.
- A woman should spread open the folds of skin around her
vagina with one hand, then use her other hand to clean
the area around her vagina and
urethra thoroughly with medicated towelettes or swabs.
She should wipe the area from front to back to avoid contaminating the urethra
with bacteria from the
anus.
- Begin urinating into the toilet or urinal. A
woman should continue to hold apart the folds of skin around the vagina while
she urinates.
- After the urine has flowed for several seconds, place
the collection cup into the stream and collect about
2 fl oz (59 mL) of this
"midstream" urine without interrupting the flow.
- Do not touch the
rim of the cup to your genital area, and do not get toilet paper, pubic hair,
stool (feces), menstrual blood, or other foreign matter in the urine
sample.
- Finish urinating into the toilet or
urinal.
- Carefully replace the lid on the cup and return it to the
lab. If you are collecting the urine at home and cannot get it to the lab in an
hour, refrigerate it.
A urine sample collected over time, such as over 4 or 24 hours,
gives the most accurate results so you may be asked to collect your urine over
a specific time period.
Timed urine collection (such as 4 hours or 24 hours)
- You start collecting your urine in the morning. When you first
get up, empty your bladder but do not save this urine. Write down the time that
you urinated to mark the beginning of your 24-hour collection
period.
- For the next 24 hours, collect all your urine. Your doctor
or lab will usually provide you with a large container that holds about
1 gal (4 L). The container has
a small amount of preservative in it. Urinate into a small, clean container and
then pour the urine into the large container. Do not touch the inside of either
container with your fingers.
- Keep the large container in the
refrigerator for the 24 hours.
- Empty your bladder for the final
time at or just before the end of the 24-hour period. Add this urine to the
large container and record the time.
- Do not get toilet paper, pubic
hair, stool (feces), menstrual blood, or other foreign matter in the urine
sample.
How It Feels
There is no discomfort while collecting a urine sample.
Risks
There is no chance of problems while collecting a urine
sample.
Results
A microalbumin test checks urine for the presence of a protein
called
albumin. Microalbuminuria is most often caused by
kidney damage from
diabetes. Normal results may vary depending on:
- The laboratory.
- The type (random
versus timed) of urine sample collected.
- The time of day of the
sample.
- Whether you are male or female.
- Whether you are
on bed rest or able to move about normally.
Abnormal values
You may need more than one test to find out how well your
kidneys are working.
- When your kidneys do not work well and leak
between 165 and 300 mg of albumin in 24 hours, your doctor may check your urine
more often to watch for kidney damage.
- If your kidneys leak 300 mg
or more of albumin in 24 hours (macroalbuminuria), you may have
chronic kidney disease.
- If you have 2 or 3
high results in a 3- to 6-month period and you have diabetes, your doctor may
find kidney damage (diabetic nephropathy). Even though
diabetes is the most common reason for high results, there are many other
kidney problems that can cause high results.
Pregnant women with diabetes may have their urine checked to
watch for high amounts of albumin.
What Affects the Test
Reasons you may not be able to have the test or why the results
may not be helpful include:
- Having high blood sugar levels,
urinary tract infections, high blood pressure,
heart failure, or a high fever during an
infection.
- Exercising just before the test.
- Taking
medicines, such as aspirin,
corticosteroids, and some
antibiotics, such as amoxicillin.
- Having
menstrual bleeding or vaginal discharge, which may temporarily affect the urine sample.
What To Think About
- The American Diabetes Association recommends a
microalbumin urine test for people with:
-
Type 2
diabetes: first at diagnosis and then yearly for diabetic
nephropathy.
-
Type 1 diabetes: yearly screening for diabetic
nephropathy should begin 5 years after diagnosis.
- If a microalbumin urine test shows that kidney
damage may be present, a test to check
creatinine levels may be done. A blood test for
creatinine is done along with a 24-hour creatinine clearance urine test to
check kidney function. For more information, see the medical test
Creatinine and Creatinine Clearance.
- A
less precise test, the urine dipstick test, can be used to check for
microalbuminuria in a single sample of urine. However, the dipstick test does
not accurately detect microalbuminuria and is not recommended in place of a
microalbumin urine test.
References
Other Works Consulted
Credits
| Author | Jan Nissl, RN, BS |
| Editor | Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA |
| Associate Editor | Tracy Landauer |
| Primary Medical Reviewer | Martin Gabica, MD - Family Medicine |
| Last Updated | March 1, 2007 |
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