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Raised blood urea in the elderly: a clinical and pathological study

Raised blood urea in the elderly: a clinical and pathological study
Raised blood urea in the elderly: a clinical and pathological study

We have attempted to define a normal range for blood urea and creatinine for elderly inpatients and to determine the relative importance of pre-renal, renal and post-renal pathology in those with renal impairment. A total of 118 admissions to an acute geriatric unit and 67 separate post mortems in patients over 67 years of age were studied prospectively. Up to 123 items of data were coded and analysed including blood urea and creatinine, clinical or pathological changes associated with renal disease, clinical outcome and post mortem findings. We determined our own 'normal' hospital ranges for urea (1.4-13.2 mmol/l) and creatinine (48-141 μmol/l) from plasma values in 76 patients with no evidence of renal impairment, either on admission or in the past. Using these values 41% of post mortem cases and 25% of clinical admissions had a raised blood urea. Pre-renal conditions such as cardiac failure, dehydration and gastrointestinal haemorrhage, either alone or in combination, were present in 56% of these patients. Urea and creatinine values were substantially higher in patients who died in hospital as opposed to those who were discharged or transferred. Creatinine values were greater in those with intrinsic renal disease or post-renal obstruction as compared to patients with pre-renal causes of renal impairment. Patients with histological evidence of extensive glomerulosclerosis or nephrosclerosis had higher urea and creatinine levels than those with only minor ageing changes.

0032-5473
174-179
Bowker, Lesley K.
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Briggs, R.S.J.
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
Gallagher, P.J.
2f72a296-4323-4eed-b628-807429f562b1
Robertson, Dorothy R.C.
6c21dc7e-bb24-43bb-b037-780c37acaf54
Bowker, Lesley K.
d9609cd5-d773-4e20-8a26-a0c576f6d569
Briggs, R.S.J.
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
Gallagher, P.J.
2f72a296-4323-4eed-b628-807429f562b1
Robertson, Dorothy R.C.
6c21dc7e-bb24-43bb-b037-780c37acaf54

Bowker, Lesley K., Briggs, R.S.J., Gallagher, P.J. and Robertson, Dorothy R.C. (1992) Raised blood urea in the elderly: a clinical and pathological study. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 68 (797), 174-179. (doi:10.1136/pgmj.68.797.174).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We have attempted to define a normal range for blood urea and creatinine for elderly inpatients and to determine the relative importance of pre-renal, renal and post-renal pathology in those with renal impairment. A total of 118 admissions to an acute geriatric unit and 67 separate post mortems in patients over 67 years of age were studied prospectively. Up to 123 items of data were coded and analysed including blood urea and creatinine, clinical or pathological changes associated with renal disease, clinical outcome and post mortem findings. We determined our own 'normal' hospital ranges for urea (1.4-13.2 mmol/l) and creatinine (48-141 μmol/l) from plasma values in 76 patients with no evidence of renal impairment, either on admission or in the past. Using these values 41% of post mortem cases and 25% of clinical admissions had a raised blood urea. Pre-renal conditions such as cardiac failure, dehydration and gastrointestinal haemorrhage, either alone or in combination, were present in 56% of these patients. Urea and creatinine values were substantially higher in patients who died in hospital as opposed to those who were discharged or transferred. Creatinine values were greater in those with intrinsic renal disease or post-renal obstruction as compared to patients with pre-renal causes of renal impairment. Patients with histological evidence of extensive glomerulosclerosis or nephrosclerosis had higher urea and creatinine levels than those with only minor ageing changes.

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Published date: March 1992

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479050
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479050
ISSN: 0032-5473
PURE UUID: 9936911d-279d-49b3-b154-136bef926ac4

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Date deposited: 19 Jul 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Lesley K. Bowker
Author: R.S.J. Briggs
Author: P.J. Gallagher
Author: Dorothy R.C. Robertson

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