Erythrocytes (hematuria)
Hematuria is defined as a high urine red blood cell count sustained over three specimens taken on different days. In a normal urine, less than 1,5 million erythrocytes are found in a 24-hour specimen. This normal value represents a count of less than 5 RBC/hpf. Hematuria is normally associated with a urinary tract disease. Some cases of idiopathic hematuria have been reported in the literature. Red blood cells originating from an external source, like vaginal bleeding, is not a true hematuria.
Two types of hematuria can be seen in urine
Two types of hematuria can be seen in urine
Lower urinary tract hematuria | ||
Dysmorphic hematuriaDysmorphocytosis is characterized by bizarre shapes and projections of the cell membrane called blebs. Schramek has demonstrated that the dysmorphocytosis can be reproduced in vitro, by osmotic shocks in a hemolytic media. This situation compares well with the travel of a red blood cell from the glomerule to the bladder. In glomerulonephritis, the dysmorphic cells can represent up to 80% of the erythrocytes. A value of 14% was proposed by Pillsworth, as a cut-off value for the differentiation of renal from non-renal hematuria. At room temperature, the specimen is stable for up to 5 hours . It is not rare to see, in a sediment, what seems to be two populations of erythrocytes. This situation could correspond to a mixed hematuria. Recently, a glomerular-specific morphological alteration of red cells has been described, G1 cells or doughnut-shaped erythrocytes (acanthocyte) with one or more blebs are considered to be reliable markers for glomerular diseases. Tomita et al Nagama et al have futher refined the dysmorphocytosis concept. . Dysmorphic G1 cells called D cells are subdivised under three groups called D1, D2, and D3.
D3 cell is a sensitive marker for glomerular diseases, and that D1 and/or D2 cells are markers for severe glomerular diseases. |