Uric acid crystalluria

Background

  • Common cause of red, pink, or orange urine in neonates
    • Occurs mostly in the first week of life, but can occur anytime during infancy
  • Parents often confuse this phenomenon with blood, leading to presentation to ED[1]
  • Often due to dehydration and relative immaturity of kidney's concentrating abilities
    • Breastfeeding may increase uric acid crystalluria due to its high protein content, which acidifies urine and promotes urate crystallization

Clinical Features

  • Reddish, pink, or orange urine noted in diaper
  • History of breast-feeding and/or dehydration
  • Baby is otherwise well-appearing (suspect alternate diagnoses if has colicky symptoms or febrile)
Representative characteristic of the red/orange urine

Differential Diagnosis

  • For female neonates, consider withdrawal bleeding due to lack of maternal hormones
  • Consider other serious causes, including obstructive uropathies, porphyria, familial/genetic causes of hyperuricemia[2]
  • Consider foods or medications: beets, rifampin, multivitamins, pyridium, etc

Pediatric Hematuria

Macroscopic Hematuria Transient Microhematuria Persistent Microhematuria
Blunt abdominal trauma Strenuous exercise Benign familial hematuria
Urinary tract infection Congenital anomalies Idiopathic hypercalciuria
Nephrolithiasis Trauma Immunoglobulin A nephropathy
Infections Menstruation
Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis Bladder catheterization Alport syndrome
High fever Sickle cell trait or anemia
Immunoglobulin A nephropathy Henoch-Schonlein purpura
Hypercalciuria Drugs and toxins
Sickle cell disease Lupus nephritis

Look-Alikes

Evaluation

Workup

Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis

Management

  • Reassurance
    • No further workup indicated, unless alternate causes are suspected

Disposition

  • Discharge

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Küpeli S, Yurdakök M, Kilinc G, Bilgetekin E. Urinary uric acid levels and discoloration of diapers in healthy neonates. Pediatr Nephrol. 2005 Sep;20(9):1361-2. doi: 10.1007/s00467-005-1934-5. Epub 2005 Jun 8. PMID: 15942785.
  2. 1. Jeng JY, Franz WB. Orange Stains in a Healthy Neonate’s Diaper. Clinical Pediatrics. 2014;53(9):908-910. doi:10.1177/0009922814536777