Cortisol Urine Total

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Cortisol Urine Total
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Cortisol Urine Total, in Visit Clinic

Measures total cortisol excreted in urine over 24 hours to assess adrenal hormone production and stress response 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 Cortisol Urine Total Test in Visit Clinic?

The Cortisol Urine Total test measures how much cortisol your body passes in urine, usually from a 24-hour collection. Cortisol is a hormone made by the adrenal glands. It helps control your stress response, blood pressure, metabolism, and immune activity. Measuring urine cortisol gives a picture of total daily cortisol production. Doctors use it to help detect conditions like Cushing’s syndrome and Addison’s disease. It can also find adrenal tumors and monitor treatment. Results are interpreted with symptoms, blood tests, and imaging. Stress, illness, sleep changes, and some medicines can affect the result.

Cortisol Urine Total Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Collect a 24-hour urine sample; follow medication and stress guidance from your doctor.

Cortisol Urine Total Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Cortisol Urine Total test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Cortisol Urine Total Test in Visit Clinic?

Cortisol Urine Total is commonly included in adrenal function or endocrine panels. Doctors may order it when patients have unexplained weight gain or loss, muscle weakness, high blood pressure, fatigue, or unusual bruising. It helps diagnose Cushing’s syndrome, Addison’s disease, and adrenal tumors and can monitor treatment. Abnormal results may come from stress, sleep problems, illness, or certain drugs. A family history of endocrine disorders may prompt testing.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a normal cortisol level in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal 24‑hour urinary free cortisol is roughly 10–100 µg per 24 hours (≈28–276 nmol/24 h); exact reference ranges vary by laboratory and assay. Some labs use a cutoff near 50 µg/24 h. Results above the lab’s upper limit may prompt repeat testing and further assessment for Cushing’s syndrome; interpretation should consider clinical context and medications.

What does it mean when cortisol is high in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

High urinary cortisol means your body is excreting excess free cortisol, indicating hypercortisolism. Causes include Cushing’s syndrome (pituitary, adrenal, or ectopic ACTH tumors), prolonged glucocorticoid use, or stress‑related/“pseudo‑Cushing” conditions (depression, alcohol, obesity). It raises risks—weight gain, high blood pressure, insulin resistance, bone loss—and requires confirmatory testing (repeat urine, late‑night salivary cortisol, dexamethasone suppression) and evaluation for causes.

What is a normal total cortisol level in Visit Clinic?plus

A normal total (serum) cortisol level varies by time of day: in the early morning (around 8 AM) it's roughly 140–690 nmol/L (5–25 µg/dL), while afternoon values are lower, about 90–400 nmol/L (3–15 µg/dL). Levels are assay- and lab-specific; clinical interpretation requires correlation with symptoms, timing, and repeat testing. Ask your clinician for your lab's reference range.

How do I read my cortisol test results in Visit Clinic?plus

Read your cortisol result against the lab’s reference range and the sample time (cortisol peaks in the morning and falls later in the day). A single high result may reflect stress, illness, or steroid use; persistently high levels suggest Cushing’s. Low results can indicate adrenal insufficiency. Abnormal values usually require repeat testing and complementary tests (ACTH, 24‑hour urine, suppression/stimulation) and clinical correlation—discuss with your clinician.

What are the symptoms of high cortisol in Visit Clinic?plus

High cortisol can cause weight gain (especially around the abdomen and face), a rounded "moon" face, increased appetite, and fat redistribution. Other signs include persistent fatigue, muscle weakness, thinning skin with easy bruising and purple stretch marks, high blood pressure and blood sugar, mood changes (anxiety, depression, irritability), poor sleep, cognitive difficulties, menstrual irregularities and reduced libido.

Is a urine cortisol test accurate in Visit Clinic?plus

A 24‑hour urinary free cortisol (UFC) test is useful and reasonably accurate for detecting sustained cortisol excess, but results can be skewed by incomplete collection, kidney dysfunction, high fluid intake, certain drugs, acute illness or intermittent secretion. Spot urine tests are less reliable. Creatinine correction and repeat or complementary tests (late‑night salivary cortisol, dexamethasone suppression) plus clinical correlation improve diagnostic accuracy.