Nephrologists often use a rule of thumb that the urine protein: creatinine ratio—a unitless number—approximates the 24-h protein excretion in grams. This approximation is based on the assumption that the 24-h urine creatinine excretion is approximately 1000 mg.
There are few instances when this might not be true and hence in those cases the Total Protein/creatinine ratio can be misleading and give false results.
1. AKI:- As there is decreased clearance of creatinine, the total protein/crt ratio can have now a falsely lower denominator and hence leading to a larger ratio. This can possibly mistake some cases of just pure AKI with AKI now with nephrotic syndrome.
2. Increased Muscle mass: In cases of gross increase in muscle mass, the ratio can grossly underestimate the total ratio.
3. Severe CKD
A nice reference is in CJASN from 2009
Thursday, February 7, 2013
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