Catecholamines - Spot Urine

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Catecholamines - Spot Urine
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Catecholamines - Spot Urine, in Visit Clinic

Measures stress hormones in a single urine sample to help detect hormone-secreting tumors and causes of high blood pressure in Visit Clinic.

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

What is a Catecholamines - Spot Urine Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures catecholamines and their breakdown products in a single urine sample. Catecholamines are stress hormones such as adrenaline and noradrenaline. They help control heart rate, blood pressure, and how the body responds to stress. Measuring them helps find causes of sudden high blood pressure, repeated headaches, sweating, or racing heart. The test can help detect hormone-secreting tumors like pheochromocytoma. Doctors use spot urine results alongside symptoms, blood tests, and imaging. A 24-hour urine or blood tests may be used for confirmation. Results guide diagnosis, treatment decisions, and monitoring of known conditions or medication effects.

Catecholamines - Spot Urine Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Avoid caffeine, smoking, certain drugs and foods for 24–48 hours; follow doctor's instructions.

Catecholamines - Spot Urine Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Catecholamines - Spot Urine test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Catecholamines - Spot Urine Test in Visit Clinic?

Catecholamines - Spot Urine is often ordered as part of hormonal workups for high blood pressure or suspected adrenal tumors. Doctors may request it when a patient has episodic headaches, sweating, palpitations, or unexplained hypertension. Abnormal results can come from tumors, certain medications, stress, or foods. A family history of adrenal tumors or genetic syndromes may make testing more important for early detection and monitoring.

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Frequently asked questions

For any unanswered questions, reach out to our support team via email. We will assist you as soon as possible

Can you see catecholamines in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes. Catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine) and their metabolites (metanephrines, vanillylmandelic acid) can be measured in urine—commonly via a 24‑hour collection or fractionated metanephrine testing—to help diagnose conditions like pheochromocytoma. Levels may be influenced by stress, medications, certain foods (eg, caffeine, bananas), and kidney function, so proper preparation and clinical interpretation are important.

What does a spot urine test for in Visit Clinic?plus

A spot (random) urine test screens for substances and signs of disease: proteins (including albumin and albumin-to-creatinine ratio), glucose, blood, nitrites and leukocyte esterase (infection), ketones, bilirubin, urobilinogen, pH, specific gravity, and creatinine. It can detect urinary tract infections, kidney disease, diabetes, dehydration, pregnancy hormone (hCG) or drugs, and guide further testing.

Which chemical in the urine may indicate pheochromocytoma in Visit Clinic?plus

Elevated urinary catecholamine metabolites — particularly metanephrines (metanephrine and normetanephrine) — are the primary chemical indicators of pheochromocytoma. Urine vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) may also be increased. These are measured in a 24-hour urine collection (or via plasma metanephrines) to detect excess catecholamine production and guide further imaging and specialist evaluation.

Are catecholamine hormones in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes—catecholamine hormones (epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine) and their metabolites appear in urine. Urinary levels, especially 24‑hour collections measuring metanephrines and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA), help assess excess catecholamine production (e.g., pheochromocytoma) or stress. Plasma free metanephrines or urine testing are standard diagnostic tools; metabolites are generally more stable and diagnostically reliable than intact catecholamines.

What is a normal value for catecholamines in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal 24‑hour urine catecholamine values: epinephrine <20 µg/24 h, norepinephrine about 15–80 µg/24 h, dopamine about 65–400 µg/24 h. Some labs report different units (nmol/24 h or µg/g creatinine) and reference ranges vary slightly. Values can be affected by age, medications, stress and collection errors; discuss abnormal results with your clinician.

What is a urine test for adrenal tumor in Visit Clinic?plus

A urine test for an adrenal tumor usually involves a noninvasive 24‑hour urine collection to measure hormone metabolites produced by adrenal masses. Common assays include urinary free cortisol (for cortisol‑producing tumors) and metanephrines or catecholamine metabolites (for pheochromocytoma). Elevated levels indicate excess hormone production by the adrenal gland, guiding diagnosis and further imaging or specialist referral.