Plasma creatinine and urea: creatinine ratio in patients with raised plasma urea.
- 8 October 1977
- Vol. 2 (6092) , 929-932
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.6092.929
Abstract
We examined the plasma urea and creatinine concentrations and the ratio between them according to diagnosis in 100 unselected and 31 selected adult hospital patients with a plasma urea concentration greater than or equal to 10 mmol/l (60mg/100ml). We also examined plasma urea and creatinine concentrations in 350 unselected consecutive patients, but found no useful relation between the two values. Congestive heart failure was the most common identifiable cause of a raised plasma urea concentration in the 100 unselected patients (36%). Among these 100 patinets the plasma creatinine concentration was a more useful discriminant between prerenal uraemia and intrinsic renal failure than was the urea:creatinine ratio or the plasma urea concentration. A plasma creatinine concentration greater than 250 mumol/1 (2-8 mg/100ml) indicated intrinsic renal failure with a 90% probability.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinineUrology, 1975
- Uraemia in congestive heart failure.1974
- The significance of serum creatinine and the blood urea-serum creatinine ratio in azotaemia.1972
- Uraemia in congestive heart failure.1969
- Creatininemia Versus UremiaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1966
- Renal function and renal impairment in congestive heart failureProgress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 1961
- Renal abnormalities in congestive heart failure.1960
- SYMPOSIUM ON CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURECirculation, 1960