Blood Urea Nitrogen Measure
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A Blood Urea Nitrogen Measure is a medical measure that quantifies urea nitrogen and protein metabolism (through blood serum analysis).
- AKA: BUN Test, Serum Urea Nitrogen Test, Blood Urea Test, Nitrogen Waste Measure.
- Context:
- It can typically assess Kidney Function through waste measurement.
- It can typically indicate Protein Metabolism through urea level.
- It can typically evaluate Renal Health through nitrogen clearance.
- It can typically monitor Disease Status through metabolic waste.
- It can typically guide Treatment Decision through blood chemistry.
- ...
- It can often detect Kidney Disease through elevated level.
- It can often track Treatment Response through value change.
- It can often assess Nutritional Status through protein breakdown.
- It can often identify Dehydration through concentration change.
- ...
- It can range from being a Normal BUN Level to being an Elevated BUN Level, depending on its measurement value.
- It can range from being a Fasting Measurement to being a Post-Meal Measurement, depending on its testing condition.
- It can range from being a Single Test Result to being a Trend Analysis, depending on its monitoring duration.
- ...
- Measure Output: a BUN Reading in mg/dL:
- Normal Range: 6-20 mg/dL
- Mild Elevation: 21-40 mg/dL
- Moderate Elevation: 41-80 mg/dL
- Severe Elevation: >80 mg/dL
- ...
- Examples:
- BUN Testing Purposes, such as:
- BUN Clinical Applications, such as:
- Diagnostic Uses, such as:
- Monitoring Purposes, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Blood Glucose Measure, which measures sugar level rather than nitrogen waste.
- Blood Electrolyte Measure, which measures mineral balance rather than protein catabolism.
- Blood pH Measure, which measures acid-base status rather than waste product.
- See: Blood Test Reference Range, Serum Creatinine Measure, Urea Cycle, Kidney Function Test, Protein Metabolism, Renal Disease, Blood Chemistry.
References
2016
- (Wikipedia, 2016) ⇒ http://wikipedia.org/wiki/blood_urea_nitrogen Retrieved:2016-4-25.
- The liver produces urea in the urea cycle as a waste product of the digestion of protein. Normal human adult blood should contain between 6 and 20 mg of urea nitrogen per 100 ml (6–20 mg/dL) of blood. Individual laboratories will have different reference ranges as the assay used will vary between laboratories. [1]
- ↑ Normal Lab Results from Marshal University School of Medicine