24 HRS URINE-OXALATE

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24 HRS URINE-OXALATE
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24 HRS URINE-OXALATE, in Visit Clinic

Measures oxalate in a full day's urine to assess risk of kidney stones and metabolic problems in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Urine
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a 24 HRS URINE-OXALATE Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures the amount of oxalate eliminated in your urine over 24 hours. Oxalate is a natural chemical that can bind with calcium to form crystals. High urine oxalate raises the chance of kidney stone formation and can signal abnormal oxalate metabolism. Doctors use the test to evaluate people with kidney stones, recurrent urinary symptoms, or certain digestive disorders. It also helps monitor treatment or dietary changes aimed at lowering stone risk. Results guide diet advice, medication decisions, and further testing for inherited conditions. A single elevated result may prompt repeat testing or additional investigations into diet, supplements, or bowel disease.

24 HRS URINE-OXALATE Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Avoid high-oxalate foods and vitamins; collect urine for full 24 hours as instructed.

24 HRS URINE-OXALATE Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The 24 HRS URINE-OXALATE test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a 24 HRS URINE-OXALATE Test in Visit Clinic?

24 HRS URINE-OXALATE is often ordered as part of a kidney stone or metabolic urine panel when someone has had stones, blood in the urine, or recurrent flank pain. It helps diagnose high oxalate levels from diet, intestinal disease, or inherited conditions and monitors response to diet or medication. Abnormal results can come from high-oxalate foods, vitamin C excess, bowel surgery or disease, and some medications, and a family history of stones may make testing more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a 24-hour urine oxalate test in Visit Clinic?plus

A 24-hour urine oxalate test measures the total oxalate excreted in urine over one day to assess risk of calcium oxalate kidney stones, detect hyperoxaluria, and monitor therapy. The patient collects all urine for 24 hours in a provided container (store refrigerated or with preservative per instructions). Elevated results suggest increased oxalate production or absorption and guide dietary, medical, or genetic evaluation.

Can a 24-hour urine test detect kidney stones in Visit Clinic?plus

A 24‑hour urine test does not directly detect an existing kidney stone — imaging (CT, ultrasound, X‑ray) is used for diagnosis. The test measures urine volume and levels of calcium, oxalate, uric acid, citrate, sodium and other substances to identify metabolic risk factors for stone formation. It’s useful after a stone episode or for recurrent stones to guide prevention and treatment.

What does high oxalate in urine mean in Visit Clinic?plus

High oxalate in urine means excess oxalate excretion, increasing risk of calcium‑oxalate kidney stones. Causes include high dietary oxalate, excess vitamin C, intestinal malabsorption, certain medications, or rare genetic overproduction. Evaluation commonly uses a 24‑hour urine test and metabolic assessment. Management emphasizes good hydration, moderate dietary oxalate reduction, adequate dietary calcium, and treating underlying conditions to lower stone risk.

What are normal results for a 24-hour urine test in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal 24‑hour urine results: volume 800–2,000 mL; creatinine roughly 0.6–2.6 g/day (varies by sex/muscle mass); total protein <150 mg/day and albumin <30 mg/day (no microalbuminuria); calcium about 100–300 mg/day; sodium varies with diet (typical 40–220 mmol/day); uric acid within expected sex-based ranges; no detectable glucose, significant blood, or ketones.

How to remove oxalate from urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Lower urinary oxalate by drinking plenty of water to dilute urine, following a low-oxalate diet (avoid spinach, nuts, cocoa, tea, beets), and eating adequate dietary calcium with meals to bind oxalate in the gut. Limit high‑dose vitamin C, excessive sodium and animal protein. Consider probiotics or prescribed medications for enteric or primary hyperoxaluria. Discuss testing and tailored treatment with your healthcare provider.

What foods to avoid for 24 hour urine test in Visit Clinic?plus

Before a 24-hour urine collection, avoid foods and drinks that can alter results: caffeine (coffee, tea, cola), chocolate, bananas, vanilla‑flavored products, citrus fruits, strong cheeses, alcoholic drinks, and large doses of vitamin C. Also avoid smoking and certain medications if advised. Specific restrictions depend on the test type—follow your clinician’s or lab’s instructions.