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Test Code KURDM Potassium Urine Random

Additional Codes

Cerner

NextGen

Potassium Urine Random

Potassium Urine Random

Alternate Name(s)

K Urine Random

Methodology

Potentiometric for ionic Potassium.

Patient Preparation

None

Collection Instructions

Catheterized specimens collected according to clinical policies and procedures

Radom clean catch instructions: Random Urine Collection Instructions

Specimen Requirements

Container

  • Sterile/clean plastic urine container

 or  or 

  • Non-preservative urine tube (BD Vacutainer® Ref #364980)

Stability

Storage

Temperature

Stability

Room Temperature

18-28°C

≤ 4 days

Refrigerated

 2-8°C

≤ 7 days

Frozen

≤-18 °C

≤ 6 months

Rejection Criteria

Gross Hemolysis

Result Reporting and Reference Values

Reported in mmol/L                     

Reference range not established. Suggest 24 hr study

Reflex Testing

None

Limitations

Ortho reports no significant effect with the following:

  • Bilirubin up to 40 mg/dL
  • Lipemia up to 800 mg/dL 

Useful For

Potassium is the major cation of the intracellular fluid. Measurement of serum potassium is used for evaluation of electrolyte imbalance, cardiac arrhythmias, muscular weakness, hepatic encephalopathy, and renal failure and for the monitoring of ketoacidosis in diabetes mellitus and intravenous fluid replacement therapy.  More than 90% of hypertensive patients with aldosteronism have a low K+; a low K+ is also common in vomiting, diarrhea, alcoholism, and folic acid deficiency. High K+ values occur in rapid K+ infusion, end stage renal failure, hemolysis, trauma, Addison’s disease, metabolic acidosis, acute starvation, dehydration, and acute medical emergency.  Normally, K+ is freely filtered by the glomerulus but tends to be conserved if the serum K+ is low. Urinary potassium may be elevated with dietary increase, hyperaldosteronism, renal tubular acidosis, and at the onset of alkalosis.