Red cell morphology as a diagnostic aid in hematuria
B. S. Chang
Dried smears of urinary sediment stained with Wright's stain were examined
and compared in 20 selected patients with hematuria. In ten patients with
microscopic hematuria and glomerular lesions demonstrated by renal biopsy,
the urinary red cells were characteristically dysmorphic and hypochromic.
This was distinctly different from the red cell morphology in ten patients
with nonglomerular causes of hematuria, which was more like peripheral
blood. The pathogenesis of the changes in red cell morphology seen in
glomerular hematuria is unknown, but it appears not to be due to the urine
composition per se. It is concluded that with some limitations, this
simple, noninvasive technique may be useful in identifying a source of
bleeding in the workup of hematuria.