Authors: Mary A. Williamson Mt(ascp) Phd,L. Michael Snyder Md
Decreased Ratio (
<
10:1) with Decreased BUN In
Acute tubular necrosis
Low-protein diet, starvation, severe liver disease, and other causes of decreased urea synthesis
Repeated dialysis (urea rather than creatinine diffuses out of extracellular fluid)
Inherited deficiency of urea cycle enzymes (e.g., hyperammonemias—urea is virtually absent in blood)
SIADH (due to tubular secretion of urea)
Pregnancy
Decreased Ratio (
<
10:1) with Increased Creatinine In
Phenacemide therapy (accelerates conversion of creatine to creatinine)
Rhabdomyolysis (releases muscle creatinine)
Muscular patients who develop renal failure
Limitations
DKA (acetoacetate causes false increase in creatinine with certain methodologies, resulting in normal or decreased ratio when dehydration should produce an increased ratio)
Cephalosporin therapy (interferes with creatinine measurement)
CALCITONIN
Definition