Proteinuria

Background

  • Normal protein excretion <150mg/24 hours
  • >3.5g/24h is nephrotic range
  • Dipstick: more sensitive to albumin, less sensitive to Bence-Jones protein and globulins
    • "Trace" protein on dipstick is approximately normal
  • Key EM role: identify proteinuria associated with emergent conditions (preeclampsia, nephrotic syndrome, glomerulonephritis)
  • Incidental proteinuria on UA often requires outpatient follow-up, not ED workup

Differential Diagnosis

Transient/Functional (Benign)

  • Fever, acute illness, strenuous exercise, orthostatic proteinuria
  • Dehydration, cold exposure
  • Usually resolves when precipitant corrected — no further workup needed in ED

Renal

Pregnancy-Related

Other

Evaluation

When to Evaluate in ED

  • Pregnant patient with proteinuria → check BP, labs for preeclampsia
  • Proteinuria + hematuria + RBC casts → glomerulonephritis workup
  • Proteinuria + severe edema → nephrotic syndrome workup
  • Isolated trace/1+ proteinuria without above features → outpatient follow-up

Workup

  • BMP: creatinine, albumin
  • CBC
  • Urine protein-to-creatinine ratio (spot urine — correlates with 24h protein)
  • Urine microscopy: RBC casts (GN), oval fat bodies (nephrotic syndrome)
  • If preeclampsia: LFTs, uric acid, LDH, platelet count

Management

  • Treat underlying cause
  • Preeclampsia: magnesium sulfate, antihypertensives, OB consultation
  • Nephrotic syndrome: diuretics for edema, nephrology referral
  • Most isolated proteinuria: outpatient nephrology follow-up

Disposition

  • Admit: preeclampsia/eclampsia, acute GN with renal failure, severe nephrotic syndrome
  • Discharge: incidental proteinuria with normal renal function — arrange outpatient repeat UA and nephrology referral

See Also

References