Originally Posted by
andrew
Heh, yes they do sound off the chart. We have two different systems of measurement. I'm not sure what that relates to in your terms but here in Oz, 90 - 110 is normal. Recently though I measured 136 which, for me is about normal. Docs start getting worried when it goes over 160 or so.
I shouldn't raise an issue without researching it first, then sharing what I find second. The Internet is a starting point only. I learned early on to verify all things I found through my primary care doctor. The Internet helps form questions for your visits with doctors, though. It would seem, from reading this, that when we speak of creatinine levels, we may be talking about three separate tests. (Maybe it's just me!)
Creatinine and Creatinine Clearance
Blood Creatinine
Results
Creatinine and creatinine clearance tests measure
creatinine levels in your blood and urine to give information about how well your kidneys are working. The creatinine clearance value is found from the amounts of creatinine in the urine and blood and from the amount of urine you pass in 24 hours. This value is the amount of blood cleared of creatinine per minute, based on your body size.
Normal
Normal results may vary from lab to lab.
Blood creatinine and creatinine clearance
Blood creatinine:
Men: 0.7–1.2
milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL)
Women: 0.6–1.0 mg/dL
Teen: 0.5–1.0 mg/dL
Child: 0.3–0.7 mg/dL
Newborn: 0.3–1.2 mg/dL
Creatinine clearance:
Men: 90–140
milliliters per minute (mL/min) or 1.78–2.32 milliliters per second (mL/sec)
Women: 87–107 mL/min or 1.45–1.78 mL/sec
Creatinine clearance values normally go down as you get older (normal values go down by 6.5 mL/min for every 10 years past the age of 20).
BUN-to-creatinine ratioOver 12 months of age:
10:1 to 20:1
Infants less than 12 months of age:
Up to 30:1
High values
- High creatinine blood levels. High creatinine blood levels can mean serious kidney damage or disease is present. Kidney damage can be caused by a life-threatening infection, shock, cancer, or low blood flow to the kidneys. Other conditions that can cause high blood creatinine levels include blockage of the urinary tract (such as by a kidney stone), heart failure, dehydration, excessive blood loss that causes shock, gout, or muscle conditions (such as rhabdomyolysis, gigantism, acromegaly, myasthenia gravis, muscular dystrophy, and polymyositis). Usually a high blood creatinine level means that the creatinine clearance value is lower than normal.
- High creatinine clearance. High creatinine clearance values can be caused by strenuous exercise, muscle injury (especially crushing injuries), burns, carbon monoxide poisoning, hypothyroidism, and pregnancy.
- High BUN-to-creatinine ratio. High BUN-to-creatinine ratios occur with sudden (acute) kidney failure, which may be caused by shock or severe dehydration. A blockage in the urinary tract (such as a kidney stone) can cause a high BUN-to-creatinine ratio. A very high BUN-to-creatinine ratio may be caused by bleeding in the digestive tract or respiratory tract .
Low values
- Low blood creatinine levels. Low blood creatinine levels can mean lower muscle mass caused by a disease, such as muscular dystrophy, or by aging. Low levels can also mean some types of severe liver disease or a diet very low in protein. Pregnancy can also cause low blood creatinine levels.
- Low creatinine clearance. Low creatinine clearance levels can mean serious kidney damage is present. Kidney damage can be from conditions such as a life-threatening infection, shock, cancer, low blood flow to the kidneys, or urinary tract blockage. Other conditions, such as heart failure, dehydration, and liver disease (cirrhosis), can also cause low creatinine clearance levels.
- Low BUN-to-creatinine ratio. A low BUN-to-creatinine ratio may be associated with a diet low in protein, a severe muscle injury called rhabdomyolysis, pregnancy, cirrhosis, or syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). SIADH sometimes occurs with lung disease, cancer, diseases of the central nervous system, and the use of certain medications.
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