How's
your pee been looking lately?
It's
not exactly polite conversation, but it's a question worth asking
yourself from time to time. Just as the eyes are windows into the
soul, urine is a window into the body.
It
can reveal whether you're dehydrated, for instance, a common health
issue during these sweaty summer months. Healthy urine consists of
yellow waste products that are dissolved in water. Like lemonade
mixed from a powder, the less water involved, the darker yellow (and
more pungent) the result, so dark yellow urine tells you you're due
for a glass of water.
But
to a doctor, urine can provide even more information. One way for
doctors to find out what's going on inside the body is to examine
what flows out of it. So don't be surprised the next time a doctor
asks for a urine sample for a seemingly non-urinary complaint.
In
fact, be a little proud. When you hand over that little cup, you're
participating in a medical tradition more than 6,000 years in the
making.
Urine
luck
Today's
urinalysis can reveal a great deal about a person's heath. But even
simple urine color can tell people when to seek medical attention.
Urine color may change due to something as innocuous as medications
or foods, or as malevolent as an infection or cancer.
Urine
that appears pink or red from the presence of blood is one cause for
alarm.
"If
you see blood in the urine, even once, it requires you to see a
doctor," said Marshall Stoller, a professor of urology at the
University of California, San Francisco. "It could be nothing,"
he said, but "it could be an early sign of a kidney stone or
a cancer of some sort."
Red
urine isn't the only indication of danger. "Sometimes the urine
has a sort of Coca-Cola color," Stoller said. "It could be
due to old blood from a tumor or kidney stone" or a blood clot
in the kidney, which is more common in people with sickle cell
disease.
"Another
reason that people could have that [cola] colored urine is when you
have someone who's being crushed," Stoller said. Crush injuries,
like those sustained during earthquakes, cause muscle to break down,
and bits of crushed tissue enter the bloodstream and are filtered
into urine by the kidneys.
Liver
damage can also lead to brownish urine, as can porphyria, an inherited blood blood disorder. And eating gargantuan quantities of fava beans or rhubarb can also
turn urine dark brown or black.
But
not all abnormal urine colors are bad news. In fact, if you've eaten
significant quantities of beets or blackberries, don't be surprised
to find yourself producing red or pink urine. Certain laxatives can
also turn it red.
The
same goes for orange urine, if you've been taking a urinary tract
painkiller containing phenazopyridine, which can make pee look like
Tang. Of medicines that affect urine color, "that's the
classic," Stoller said.
Methylene
blue, part of some common medications for bladder discomfort, can
turn urine blue or green. And an overabundance of water-soluble
vitamins can make urine appear brighter yellow than normal.
Strange
smells
An
inherited condition, maple syrup urine disease, so named because it
causes urine to smell like sweet maple syrup, results from the body's
inability to digest certain amino acids. It's usually diagnosed in
infants and treated with dietary restrictions, which must be started
early in life to prevent brain damage and other problems. In many
states, every newborn is tested for this disease.
Sweet-smelling
urine can also indicate diabetes mellitus, because excess blood sugar finds
its way into the urine. And as medieval doctors knew, sugar also
affects urine's taste, but that's one diagnostic test they probably
preferred to do as little as possible.
But
that's not all. Asparagus is infamous for the stench it lends urine,
which only some people can percieve.
In
the lab
"I
see 100 patients a week. The odds of seeing patients with odd-colored
urine is 1 percent," Stoller said. Rather, most of the clues
that doctors look for in urine, he explained, are invisible,
detectable only in the urinalysis lab.
"There
are dipsticks out that you can dip in the urine and identify the
likelihood of infection," Stoller said. Urinalysis labs can also
test for miniscule amounts of sugar, blood, amino acids and other
molecules, he said. They can put a number on urine's concentration,
and screen for drugs. And by examining urine's tiny crystals under a
microscope, doctors can diagnose certain types of kidney stones.
Dehydration
is the urinary issue people are most likely to encounter, Stoller
said. And dehydration, though it sounds mundane, can become very
serious very quickly, especially for the urinary system. "The
problem is when you concentrate the urine, things can get clogged
up," he said. "When kidneys get plugged up it can result in
renal failure."
"The
average adult needs about one and a half liters a day" of water,
Stoller said. "And you want to try to pee about one and a half
liters a day," he added, so "if you sweat a lot you may
need to drink substantially more."
Pass
it on: If you're concerned about the color or smell of your
urine, see a doctor.
No comments:
Post a Comment