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American family physician · Mar 2001
ReviewAsymptomatic microscopic hematuria in adults: summary of the AUA best practice policy recommendations.
- G D Grossfeld, J S Wolf, M S Litwan, H Hricak, C L Shuler, D C Agerter, and P R Carroll.
- University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, USA.
- Am Fam Physician. 2001 Mar 15;63(6):1145-54.
AbstractThe American Urological Association (AUA) convened the Best Practice Policy Panel on Asymptomatic Microscopic Hematuria to formulate policy statements and recommendations for the evaluation of asymptomatic microhematuria in adults. The recommended definition of microscopic hematuria is three or more red blood cells per high-power microscopic field in urinary sediment from two of three properly collected urinalysis specimens. This definition accounts for some degree of hematuria in normal patients, as well as the intermittent nature of hematuria in patients with urologic malignancies. Asymptomatic microscopic hematuria has causes ranging from minor findings that do not require treatment to highly significant, life-threatening lesions. Therefore, the AUA recommends that an appropriate renal or urologic evaluation be performed in all patients with asymptomatic microscopic hematuria who are at risk for urologic disease or primary renal disease. At this time, there is no consensus on when to test for microscopic hematuria in the primary care setting, and screening is not addressed in this report. However, the AUA report suggests that the patient's history and physical examination should help the physician decide whether testing is appropriate.
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