Exams and Tests
Tests for
chronic kidney disease are vital to help find out:
- Whether kidney disease happened suddenly
or has been happening over a long time.
- What
is causing the kidney damage.
- Which treatment is best to help
slow kidney damage.
- How well treatment is
working.
- When to begin
or have a
kidney transplant.
After you are diagnosed with chronic kidney disease, blood
and urine tests can help you and your doctor monitor the disease.
Tests to check kidney function
When kidney
function is decreased, substances such as
urea,
creatinine, and certain
electrolytes begin to build up in the blood. The
following tests measure levels of these substances to show how well your kidneys are working.
- A blood creatinine test helps to estimate the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) by measuring the level of creatinine in your blood. The doctor can use the GFR to regularly check how well the kidneys are working and to stage your kidney disease.
- A blood urea nitrogen (BUN) test measures how much nitrogen from the waste product urea is in your blood.
BUN level rises when the kidneys aren't working well enough to remove urea from the blood.
- A fasting blood glucose test is done to measure your
blood sugar. High blood sugar levels damage blood vessels in the
kidneys.
- Blood tests measure levels of waste products and
in your blood that should be removed by your kidneys.
- A blood test for
parathyroid hormone (PTH) checks the level of PTH, which helps control calcium and phosphorus levels.
- Urinalysis (UA) and a urine test for
microalbumin, or other urine tests, can measure protein in your
urine. Normally there is little or no protein in urine.
Tests for anemia
If the kidneys don't produce
enough of the hormone
needed to make red blood cells,
can develop. The following tests help monitor anemia:
Other tests
Your doctor may use other tests to
monitor kidney function or to find out whether another kidney disease
or condition is contributing to reduced kidney function.