Lecture 10 - Urine Sediments
Lecture 10 - Urine Sediments
Lecture 10 - Urine Sediments
Elias Bonya
B-Tech, DBMS
2017
STAINS USED IN URINALYSIS
➢ crystal violet 3 g
➢ ammonium oxalate 0.8 g
➢ 95% ethanol 20 mL
➢ distilled water 80 mL
SOLUTION 2:
➢ safranin O 1 g
➢ 95% ethanol 40 mL
➢ distilled water 400 mL
FINALIZING THE RECIPE
0.5%
Metachromatic stain
Provides enhancement of nuclear detail
Useful in the differentiation between WBCs and
renal epithelial tubular epithelial cells
Also used in examination of cells from other
body fluids
Nuclear detail is also enhanced by the addition
of 2% acetic acid to the sediment.
LIPID STAINS
Oil red O
Sudan III
Polarizing microscopy can be used
Triglycerides and neutral fats stain orange-
red
Cholesterol does not stain but is capable of
polarization
The three elements occur concurrently in the
sediment
GRAM STAIN
Not a stain
Useful in differentiation of WBCs from RBCs
2% used
A few drops added to the sediment in the test
tube, or flowed under the cover-slip of a
mounted urine sediment
Lyses' RBCs, accentuates nucleus of WBCs,
and epithelial cells
Crystals are also dissolved
HANSEL’S STAIN
❖ Variations in size
❖ Lack of characteristic structures
❖ Close resemblance to other sediment
constituents
❖ May be confused with oil droplets, yeast
cells, and air bubbles.
DIFFERENTIATION
➢ Renal inflammation
➢ Renal infection
➢ Pyelonephritis
➢ Chronic renal disease
➢ Acute glomerulonephritis
➢ Lupus erythematosus
➢ Interstitial nephritis
➢ Tumors
EPITHELIAL CELLS
❖ Squamous
❖ Transitional (urothelial)
❖ Renal tubular (RTE)
COMMON SOURCE OF
EPITHELIAL CELLS
Coccobacilli
Give cytoplasm of squamous epithelial cells
a characteristic refractile, stippled, granular
appearance with shaggy or bearded cell
borders.
IDENTIFICATION OF CLUE CELL
(RTE) cells
Vary in size depending on the area of renal
tubules from which they originate.
The size tends to diminish as they progress
from large, rectangular cells in the proximal
convoluted tubule to cuboidal or columnar
cells not much larger than WBCS in the
collecting duct.
RENAL TUBULAR CELLS
Bacteria
Yeasts
parasites
BACTERIA
Enterobacteriaceae
Staphylococcus
Enterococcus
BACTERIA
Small
Refractile oval structures
May contain or may not contain bud
In severe infection they may appear as
branched, mycelial forms.
YEAST
YEAST CELLS
Bladder parasite
Causes urinary schstosomiasis (bilharzia)
SCHSTOSMA HEMATOBIUM OVA
MCROFILARIA
PARASITES FROM FECAL
CONTAMINATION
Schstosoma mansoni
Enterobius vermicularis
Trichomonas hominis
E.t.c.
ENTEROBIUS VERMICULARIS
SPERMTOZOA
Hyaline casts
RBC casts
WBC casts
Bacterial casts
Epithelial cell casts
Fatty casts
Mixed Cellular casts
Granular casts
Waxy casts
Broad casts
HYALINE CASTS
Contain bacilli
Seen in pyelonephritis
May resemble granular casts
Usually accompanied with WBC casts
Gram stain may be used for confirmation.
EPITHELIAL CASTS
Prolonged exercise
Renal disease
Heavy proteinuria
Acute and chronic renal disease
Nephrotic syndrome
WAXY CASTS
Normal
Abnormal
These may be found in alkaline or acidic urine
NORMAL ACID CRYSTALS
Amorphous urates
Uric acid
Acid urates
Monosodium urate or sodium urates
Calcium oxalate (also seen in neutral or
alkaline urine)
NORMAL ALKALINE CRYSTALS
Amorphous phosphates
(Calcium oxalate)
Triple phosphates
Ammonium biurate
Calcium phosphate
Calcium carbonate
ANORMAL CRYSTALS OF
METABLIC ORIGIN
Cystine
Tyrosine
Leucine
Cholesterol
Bilirubin
hemosiderine
ABNORMAL CRYSTALS OF
IATROGENIC ORIGIN
Sulfonamides
Ampicillin
Radiographic contrast media
Acyclovir
Indinavir sulfate
NORMAL CRYSTALS
1. AMORPHOUS URATES
Found in acid pH
Chemically comprises of a sodium salt of uric
acid (sodium, potassium, magnesium, or
calcium)
Yellowish shapeless granulation
Birefringent
When present in sufficient numbers they form
a characteristic fluffy pink or orange
precipitatte referred to as brick dust
AMORPHOUS URATES
Envelope shaped
Octahedrons that vary somewhat in size but
are typically small, colorless and glistering
Occasionally seen as rectangular forms of
pyramidal ends
Polarize light
CALCIUM OXALATE
Less characteristic
Less frequently seen
Oval or dumbbell shaped
Both the monohydrate and the dihyrate forms
are birefringent
CALCIUM OXALATE
MONOHYRATE
(ammonium magnesium)
Also called struvite
Colorless
Commonly show great variation in size
Characteristic coffin lid
May also be seen as large long prisms that
are difficult to distinguish from calcium
phosphate
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
Renal calculi
Chronic pyelitis
Enlarged prostate
UTI
TRIPPLE PHOSPHATES
AMMONIUM BIURATE
Ammonium salt
Alkaline counterpart of uric acid and
amorphous urates in urine
Spherical with radial or concentric striations
and long prismatic spicules, resembling thorn
apples
AMMONIUM BIURATE
Yellow
May be mistaken for some forms of
sulfonamide drugs that may precipitate out of
urine
Often present in alkaline urine
Soluble at 60ºC with acetic acid and in strong
alkali
AMMONIUM BIURATE
CALCIUM PHOSPHATE
Colorless crystals
Occasionally seen in alkaline normal urine
Appear as slender prisms with wedge-like
end occurring in singly or arranged in
rosettes
May appear like triple phosphate crystals as
long as prisms of calcium monohydrate, also
known as brusite
CALCIUM PHOSPHATE
Rare
May be present as a result of inherited amino
acid disorders (hereditary tyrosinosis and
oasthouse disease), and together with
Leucine, in patients with massive liver failure
Colorless fine silky needles arranged in
sheaves or clumps, which appear black as
the microscope is foccused
TYROSINE
Sulfonamide crystals
Ampicillin
Acrovir
Indinavir
INDINAVIR CRYSTALS