A Brief Review of
Creatinine Concentration
Shannon Cook Miller,
DVM; Bruce E. LeRoy, DVM, PhD; Heather L. Tarpley, DVM; Perry J. Bain,
DVM, PhD, Kenneth S. Latimer, DVM, PhD
Class of 2004 (Miller)
and the Department of Pathology (LeRoy, Tarpley, Bain, Latimer), College
of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-7388
Introduction
Creatinine concentration
is most commonly used in veterinary medicine as an indirect indicator
of renal glomerular filtration rate and to thereby estimate renal function.
It may also be measured in peritoneal fluid for the evaluation of uroabdomen,
because it is concentrated in the urine and slow to equilibrate between
fluid compartments, taking over 4 hours to do so.
Background
Creatinine (Fig.
1) is a byproduct of the breakdown of creatine (Fig. 2) and phosphocreatine
(Fig. 3), an energy storage compound in muscle, and has a molecular
weight of 113 daltons. Creatinine, in actuality, has poor sensitivity
in diagnosing renal disease in the dog and cat because three-fourths
of renal function must be lost before abnormalities in creatinine concentration
are seen. In addition, elevations in creatinine concentration do not
correlate with a proportionate loss of renal function, further complicated
by the bodys diversion pathways (discussed in the following paragraphs)
to metabolize an overabundance of creatinine. Despite these facts,
creatinine clearance is a reliable test of renal glomerular filtration
rate (GFR) due to specific elimination of creatinine by the kidney
and general lack of metabolism elsewhere in the body. GFR is currently
considered the best overall indicator of renal function.9
 |
| Figure
1. Creatinine is a waste product derived from the enzymatic
conversion of creatine by creatine amidohydrolase. |
 |
 |
| Figure
2. Creatine can be derived from phosphocreatine by the action
of creatine kinase or from the enzymatic conversion of guanidinoactetate
by guanidinoacetate-N-methyltransferase. |
Figure
3. Phosphocreatine is an energy source in muscle that gives
rise to creatine, that is subsequently converted to creatinine. |
Creatinine is water-soluble
and distributes throughout the body water, equilibrating between various
fluid regions in approximately 4 hours with the help of Na/Cl transporters
on cell membranes. This equilibration time is longer than that for
urea, which equilibrates within 1½ hours. Because creatinine is water
soluble, it is present in small concentrations in sweat (0.1-1.3 mg/dl).
Creatinine also has been detected in peritoneal fluid, synovial fluid,
bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and aqueous and vitreous humor.8 Research
in the 1950s and 1960s discovered small quantities of creatinine in
the vomitus and feces of uremic human beings.3 Similar research
findings in animal species have not been reported. Scientific technology
has changed dramatically since those times, with more specific enzyme
mechanisms available now for testing purposes that were not available
at the time the research was performed. However, interspecies data
is lacking making meaningful comparisons impossible at this time.
Creatinine is freely
filtered by the renal glomerulus. Tubular reabsorption does not occur.
Studies indicate that a miniscule amount of proximal tubular secretion
may occur in male dogs, but that the amount is not significant and
does not interfere with creatinines value as an indicator of
GFR. This tubular secretion does not occur in cats and ponies, but
is considerable in the goat.3 A small amount of creatinine
is also excreted in the small intestine and is degraded by the enteric
flora; a negligible amount of recycling most likely occurs but is not
considered to significantly alter serum creatinine concentrations.
Alimentary tract excretion is believed to occur in the dog, cat, and
horse, as creatinine is diffusible across most cell membranes.2
Because of its slow
equilibration, dialysis is less effective in lowering the serum creatinine
concentration than it is for BUN concentration. It takes at least 4
hours for the creatinine to passively make its way along the diffusion
gradient from the serum to the ultrafiltrate that is urine, if the
glomerulus is not functioning properly. Therapeutically, diuresis of
the patient is clinically important to lower the serum creatinine concentration,
but it also is imperative to improve renal bloodflow in order to create
the maximum reduction in serum creatinine concentration.
Elevations in creatinine
concentration do not cause uremia. Uremia is defined as the clinical
signs of illness due to renal failure. Past studies in humans have
shown that a patient with an elevation in BUN concentration is most
likely to have clinical signs of uremia as compared to a patient with
the same creatinine value and a lower BUN concentration.3
Variations
in Creatinine Concentration
The serum creatinine
concentration can vary based on a number of factors including an animals
diet, muscle mass, and gender. Diets that contain high concentrations
of muscle offer a large pool of creatine and creatinine that are absorbed
in the small intestine and contribute to the serum concentration of
creatinine. Muscle mass harbors the precursor of creatinine, phosphocreatine
(Fig. 3), as an energy source. This compound is often mistakenly referred
to as "phosphocreatinine." A constant amount of phosphocreatine
is spontaneously, irreversibly and nonenzymatically converted to creatinine
daily and utilized by the body. This amount is directly proportional
to the individuals muscle mass. Therefore, a stable amount of
creatinine is presented to the kidneys daily for excretion. Muscle
disease or wasting decreases the amount of phosphocreatine available
for conversion and thereby decreases the serum creatinine concentration.
Conversely, an increasing muscle mass from conditioning or exercise
will result in an increase of phosphocreatine and serum creatinine.
Males often have higher creatinine values than females, as well.1 This
finding is most likely due to their typically increased muscle mass
as compared to females.
Serum creatinine
values also depend on the kidneys ability to excrete creatinine.
An elevation in creatinine is called azotemia and usually occurs simultaneously
with an increase in blood urea nitrogen, a compound that is also freely
filtered by the glomerulus. This can be due to prerenal, renal or postrenal
processes causing a decrease in GFR. Examples of prerenal processes
that could cause azotemia include dehydration and some medications,
such as gentamicin, oxytetracycline, amphotericin B, trimethoprim-sulfadiazine,
and furosemide.8 Renal processes could encompass anything
from congenital or breed abnormalities like Cocker Spaniel familial
nephropathy or Greyhound glomerular vasculopathy, to acquired renal
failure from such causes as amyloidosis or intoxications by sodium
arsenate or vitamin D.8 Postrenal causes include urinary
tract obstruction or rupture.
There are other non-renal
diseases that can create an elevation in serum creatinine concentration
from secondary renal involvement. In the dog, infestation with Dirofilaria
immitis, Babesia canis, Ehrlichia canis, Leishmania sp.,
or Leptospira sp. can create significant increases in creatinine
concentration that may mistakenly indicate the kidneys as part of the
disease process. Disease processes like pyometra, gastric dilatation
/ torsion, diabetes mellitus and hypercalcemia of malignancy also can
create secondary renal injury and elevate serum creatinine levels.8
A decreased serum
creatinine value is not recognized as being clinically significant
and may be the normal value for the patient, as individual variations
are seen based on gender, age, muscle mass and many additional factors.
Creatinine
Quantitation
The creatinine concentration
is most commonly determined by Jaffes reaction, a process that
takes advantage of the color change present when alkaline picrate solution
is exposed to creatinine. This is the methodology used in the UGA CVM
Clinical Pathology Laboratory. The reaction, however, is not specific
and can be falsely influenced by almost 50 compounds other than creatinine.
These interfering compounds are referred to as noncreatinine chromagens.
False-high test values in serum can result from the presence of these
noncreatinine chromagens, such as ketones, glucose, fructose, ascorbic
acid, protein, urea and ascorbic acid.3 Balint and Visy
proved that noncreatinine chromagens were absent from the urine of
the dog in 1965, which implies that there are alternate elimination
pathways for these compounds. This implies that the Jaffe reaction
is an accurate method for determining urine creatinine concentration,
as there are no compounds present to interfere with the test result.3
More specific methods
are now available for creatinine measurement, but are expensive and
limited in their availability. A clay that specifically absorbs creatinine
prior to reacting with alkaline picrate is available, but is difficult
to manipulate and is often messy. Enzyme-specific methods are available
for various domestic species but are limited in their availability.
These methods are based on the use of creatinine amidohydrolase or
creatinine inimohydrolase. However, they may be inaccurate when serum
bilirubin concentrations are greater than 50 µmol/L.8
Creatinine is remarkably
stable in blood samples and is unaffected by hemolytic or lipemic samples.
Creatinine also is relatively stable in stored serum and heparinized
plasma. Thoresen and colleagues7 attempted to mimic the
storage temperatures that would most likely be present for many samples
submitted by mail to a diagnostic laboratory. Samples for their test
were refrigerated overnight and kept at room temperature for the remainder
of the study. Creatinine values were shown to remain constant for approximately
3 days in non-refrigerated heparinized plasma and up to 7 days in stored,
non-refrigerated whole blood.7 Serum creatinine concentration
has been shown to be higher than that found in plasma. The majority
of reference intervals have been determined on serum samples.8
Creatinine
Clearance Tests
Creatinine is used
to evaluate GFR because it is almost exclusively cleared by glomerular
filtration and is neither secreted nor absorbed by the renal tubules.
Creatinine is not significantly metabolized or excreted anywhere else
in the body (insignificant but amounts are excreted in sweat and feces).
Creatinine clearance provides a reasonable estimation of GFR in domestic
animals, but is not equivalent to GFR. A decrease in clearance indicates
a decrease in GFR, but it cannot differentiate causes of decreased
GFR due to prerenal, renal or postrenal factors. When performed correctly,
a creatinine clearance test provides the benefit of detecting approximately
20% decrease in renal function, as compared to the 75% functional loss
that is necessary before elevations in BUN and creatinine concentrations
are detected.3 Two methods are most commonly used to evaluate
GFR. These are the endogenous and exogenous creatinine clearance tests.
These tests may only be performed in well hydrated, non-azotemic animals.
The endogenous creatinine
clearance test involves a measurement of the starting serum creatinine
concentration, complete evacuation of the bladder, collection of all
urine created in a set amount of time (20 minutes to 24 hours) and
determination of a final serum creatinine concentration. The urine
creatinine value is determined. The following calculation is used to
compute the endogenous creatinine clearance:
Creatinine
clearance = [urine creatinine (mg/dl) x urine volume (ml/min) ÷ serum
creatinine (mg/dl)] ÷ body weight (kg)
The endogenous creatinine
clearance test is based on the principle that serum creatinine is a
constant value for that patient because of the irreversible nonenzymatic
catabolism of phosphocreatine from the muscle. Inaccuracies with this
method are possible due to incomplete evacuation of the bladder both
before or after the procedure, tubular secretion of creatinine in some
male dogs, possible increased extrarenal secretion of creatinine (such
as in the gastrointestinal tract) and measurement of noncreatinine
chromagens like ketones that occur in the serum sample but not in the
urine sample, as the chromagens are not present in the urine. Patients
that undergo this test usually are suspected of having renal disease
because they are polyuric, not azotemic.
The plasma exogenous
creatinine clearance test (PECCT) is very similar to the iohexol clearance
test, currently considered the gold standard in human medicine. The
PECCT is useful for evaluating renal function in cases of known renal
disease, detecting early renal dysfunction in predisposed breeds, evaluation
of GFR during or after certain drug protocols that are nephrotoxic
(like aminoglycoside therapy) and monitoring continued GFR failure
in cases of known renal failure.6 The PECCT has been shown
to be an accurate indicator of GFR in healthy dogs and in dogs with
an estimated 60% or greater decrease in their GFR.9 A pre-injection
serum creatinine sample is collected, the bladder emptied and an injection
of creatinine is administered subcutaneously, intramuscularly or intravenously.
After a set period of time, 20 minutes to 24 hours, all of the urine
created is collected and a post-injection serum creatinine value is
determined. The same calculation as described above is used to determine
this value. This test is believed to present an increased challenge
to the kidney because of the presence of the exogenous creatinine in
addition to the endogenous creatinine concentration and is thought
to better represent the true GFR value. Also, with the increased amount
of creatinine present, the error from the presence of noncreatinine
chromagens in the serum becomes less significant. Serum and urine creatinine
values measured over a 10 hour period give the practitioner the most
accurate picture of renal health, although reliable information can
be gained with fewer samples in a shorter time period, if desired.
However, there is a lack of standardization of methods between practioners
that makes comparisons difficult. Also, it is unknown whether some
of the exogenous creatinine is shuttled to the proximal tubules and
excreted there in larger amounts as the kidney copes with the elevation
in creatinine challenge.2
Other
Methods for Evaluating Creatinine
Urine creatinine
/ serum creatinine ratios have been suggested by some to aid in differentiation
of prerenal from renal azotemia. These ratios are of questionable value
as they are based on single measurements and do not take into consideration
urine flow rate or volume during the test window. An example of this
includes electrolyte clearance as compared to the endogenous creatinine
clearance to evaluate renal function. Fractional clearance of sodium
is used most commonly. A single serum sample is taken to measure sodium
and creatinine concentrations and is compared to the concentrations
seen in a urine sample taken at the same time. The following formula
is used to calculate these "spot" measurements:
Fractional clearance
of sodium (%) = (urine Na/serum Na) ÷ (urine creatinine/serum creatinine)
x 100
A percentage >1
may indicate tubular failure, prerenal azotemia and concurrent administration
of diuretics or renal azotemia. A percentage <1 is likely to indicate
prerenal azotemia. This function test is of questionable use in veterinary
medicine.1
Serum blood urea
nitrogen to creatinine ratios also have been suggested as a method
to differentiate between prerenal and renal azotemia. Comparisons of
these two values are not significant enough to differentiate prerenal
from renal disease or acute from chronic renal failure.2
Urine concentrating
tests are often indicated in situations with renal dysfunction. The
patient typically has polydipsia and polyuria with submaximally concentrated
urine. In most species, polyuria precedes azotemia during the progression
of renal disease.3 This is not true in the cat, which may
maintain superior concentrating abilities even with extreme azotemia.
However, urine concentration tests in polyuric animals are not indicated
if azotemia or dehydration is present (and diuretics are not being
administered) since the combination of polyuria with either azotemia
or evidence of dehydration indicates renal disease.
Uroabdomen
As mentioned previously,
creatinine may be useful in the diagnosis of uroabdomen. Uroabdomen
is most frequently associated with rupture of the bladder or urethra
due to abdominal or pelvic trauma.5 Many of these animals
have concurrent pelvic fractures or penetrating abdominal wounds. Uroabdomen
also may be caused by non-traumatic processes, such a urinary tract
obstruction. Regardless of cause, uroabdomen results in clinical signs
of severe dehydration with or without the presence of urination, life-threatening
hyperkalemia that can cause bradycardia, severe azotemia, metabolic
acidosis with or without respiratory compensation, and chemical peritonitis.
Other electrolyte disorders, such as hyponatremia and hypochloremia
also may exist. Creatinine is a relatively large molecule (113 daltons)
that is primarily concentrated in the urine bathing the abdomen and
is slow (over 4 hours) to diffuse into the blood. Creatinine also acts
as an osmotic agent, pulling fluid from extracellular and intracellular
spaces while dehydrating the animal (a prerenal factor). As the creatinine
value in the blood stream increases, so will the BUN concentration.
This will eventually lead to clinical signs of uremia, such as vomiting,
which will worsen dehydration. The potassium in the urine will rapidly
diffuse into the bloodstream as well, creating dangerously high concentrations
that can initiate cardiac arrhythmias and damage myocytes. The hydrogen
ions normally excreted in the urine also will be retained creating
a state of metabolic acidosis. The dehydration will decrease the glomerular
filtration rate, thereby decreasing the excretion of creatinine and
urea. The retention of the urine inside the abdomen creates a continual
source of creatinine, urea and corrosive excretory products. These
corrosive products will soon create a chemical peritonitis, which results
in functional ileus and abdominal pain.
Uroabdomen is diagnosed
by a combination of patient history, physical examination findings,
complete blood cell count, serum chemistry results, abdominal radiographs,
abdominal fluid analysis and/or contrast studies of the urinary system.
A definitive diagnosis of uroabdomen is obtained by determining the
creatinine concentration in the abdominal fluid and comparing it to
the serum creatinine value. A uroabdomen sample will have a creatinine
value that varies from slightly to markedly greater than that of the
serum. Usually a value greater than two times serum creatine concentration
is diagnostic for uroabdomen.
Additional
Species Information
With the popularity
of canine rescue and adoption, it is necessary to become familiar with
breed variations in creatinine concentration. Greyhounds adpoted from
the racetrack are seen more commonly in private practice. These dogs
often have blood and biochemical values that are outside of most canine
reference ranges, but these values are considered normal for the breed
in racing condition. Studies by Porter and Canaday4 show
that elevations in creatinine, mean red blood cell count, packed cell
volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, and serum sodium,
chloride and bilirubin concentrations are normal for this breed as
compared with laboratory reference intervals which are often based
on samples from mixed breed dogs. This elevated baseline creatinine
concentration of racing Greyhounds can make it difficult for a practicioner
to evaluate renal function, if presented with a patient showing signs
of polyurina, polydipsia or uremia.4
Creatinine concentration
is more specific than BUN with regard to renal function in the cow
and the horse, because gastrointestinal excretion or absorption do
not occur.1 The rumen microflora metabolizes a larger percentage
of urea than the enteric flora in monogastrics, often preventing BUN
concentrations from increasing proportionately with creatinine levels
in cattle. Once anorexia occurs, there is often a rapid elevation in
serum BUN concentration to match the elevated creatinine concentration.
This often occurs in the final stages of renal failure.
Creatinine also is
used as a rough indicator of GFR in birds. In addition, reference intervals
are published for many species.10
References
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EA, Prasse KW (eds). Duncan & Prasse's Veterinary Laboratory Medicine:
Clinical Pathology, 4th ed., Iowa State Press, Ames, IA, 2003.
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Scott MA. Fundamentals of Veterinary Clinical Pathology, Iowa State
Press, Ames, IA, 2002.
3. Kaneko JJ, Harvey
JW, Bruss ML. Clinical Biochemistry of Domestic Animals, 5th ed. Academic
Press, San Diego, CA, 1997.
4. Feeman WE, Couto
CG, Gray TL. Serum creatinine concentrations in retired racing Greyhounds.
Vet Clin Pathol 32:40-42, 2003.
5. Gannon K, Moses
L. Uroabdomen in dogs and cats. Compend Contin Educ Pract Vet . 24:604-611,
2002.
6. Watson AD, Lefebvre
HP. Assessment of renal function using creatinine: New insights into
an old question. Proc of the Am College Vet Intern Med, 2003.
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GN, Morberg H, Mowinckel P. Effects of storage time on chemistry results
from canine whole blood, heparinized whole blood, serum and heparinized
plasma. Vet Clin Pathol 21:88-94, 1992.
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HP, Watson AD. Creatinine in the dog: A review. Vet Clin Pathol 32:162-179,
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9. Watson AD, Lefebvre
HP, Concordet D, Laroute V, Ferre JP, Braun JP, Conchou F, Toutain
PL. Plasma exogenous creatinine clearance test in dogs: Comparison
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Med 16:22-33, 2002.
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