How to Diagnose Albuminuria
Instructions
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1
Know the risk factors for albuminuria. Diabetic kidney disease, hypertension and heart disease can cause albuminuria.
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2
Ask your doctor for a specific albuminuria urine test. Routine urinalysis tests do not check for albuminuria.
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3
Initiate screening for albuminuria immediately upon receiving a diagnosis of type two diabetes. The literature shares that approximately seven percent of type two diabetes patients already show signs of albuminuria.
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4
Get tested for albuminuria once a year if you have diabetes. If the test shows more than 30 mg of albumin per g of creatinine, have a second test done to confirm the albuminuria.
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5
Consent to a single urine specimen test in which the doctor uses a dipstick to check for excessive albumin. The doctor must administer this test on the first urine void of the day.
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6
Check the albumin to creatinine ratio if an albumin-specific dipstick test yields positive results. Albumin excretion rates vary, but creatinine excretion rates are steady, which gives the doctor a more reliable indicator of kidney function.
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7
Consider the possibility of a skewed albuminuria test. Fever, heavy exercise and urinary tract infections can cause a temporary elevation in albumin levels.
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