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Foamy urine in nephrotic syndrome
Author(s) -
Márcio Dantas,
Gyl E. B. Silva,
Miguel Moysés Neto
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
clinical kidney journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2048-8513
pISSN - 2048-8505
DOI - 10.1093/ckj/sft018
Subject(s) - proteinuria , urine , medicine , nephrotic syndrome , urinalysis , pathology , urology , kidney
Several days after unprotected sex, a 21-year-old male was referred with generalized edema and enlarged painless lymph nodes. Urinalysis showed specific gravity 1036, proteinuria 4+, nitrites negative, urine microscopy with 4–6 erythrocytes/high power field (HPF), 8–10 leucocytes/HPF and the presence of hyaline and granular casts. Urine culture was negative. Proteinuria was 4.6 g/24 h, serum creatinine 88 µmol/L (1.0 mg/dL) and albumin 9 g/L (0.9 g/dL). He denied foamy urine, but was astonished when he saw his foamy urine after urinating directly into a beaker (Fig. 1A). The VDRL test was reactive (1/64) and the Treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay was positive. A renal biopsy diagnosed membranous nephropathy that was assumed to be secondary to syphilis. He was treated with penicillin. Six weeks later the edema, enlarged lymph nodes and foamy urine (Fig. 1C) had disappeared and proteinuria was 246 mg/24 h. Figure 1. Prolonged foamy urine 5 minutes (A) and 15 minutes (B) after urinating directly into a beaker. Normal pattern (not foamy) urine after remission of the proteinuria (C). Protein in urine makes the urine foamy as it lowers the surface tension. Longer-term foamy urine (Fig. 1A and B) is usually caused by proteinuria and the onset may be recalled during anamnesis. However, some patients, like the one in the present case, do not recognize it. It is more easily identified by patients that have previous experience with nephrotic syndrome. Observing foamy urine may help date the onset of proteinuria.

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