Sodium - Urine

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Sodium - Urine
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Sodium - Urine, in Visit Clinic

Measures sodium in urine to check salt balance, kidney handling of sodium, and causes of abnormal blood sodium in Visit Clinic.

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

What is a Sodium - Urine Test in Visit Clinic?

This test measures the amount of sodium in your urine. Sodium is an important electrolyte that helps control fluid balance and blood pressure. Measuring urinary sodium shows how your kidneys handle salt. Doctors use it to find reasons for low or high blood sodium in the blood. It also helps evaluate conditions like kidney disease, heart failure, liver disease, and problems with hormones such as aldosterone. Results guide treatment choices. For example, they help decide if you need more or less salt, a change in medicines, or further kidney tests. Urine sodium is often interpreted together with blood sodium and urine concentration.

Sodium - Urine Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Sodium - Urine Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

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

  • Single test

Why Take a Sodium - Urine Test in Visit Clinic?

Urinary sodium is often ordered as part of electrolyte workups or kidney panels when symptoms like swelling, high blood pressure, dizziness, or confusion occur. It helps doctors distinguish whether sodium problems come from the kidneys, dehydration, heart or liver disease, hormone issues, or medication effects such as diuretics. Diet, fluid intake, illness, and family history of salt-sensitive hypertension or inherited kidney problems can affect results.

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Frequently asked questions

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What happens if sodium is high in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

High urine sodium usually means the body is excreting excess salt or failing to reabsorb it. Causes include high dietary salt, diuretics, kidney tubular damage or salt‑wasting kidney disease, and adrenal or hormonal disorders (for example, low aldosterone). It can lead to electrolyte imbalance, volume depletion and low blood pressure, and typically prompts further tests to identify kidney or endocrine causes.

What is the normal range of urine sodium in Visit Clinic?plus

Normal urinary sodium depends on collection method. For a 24‑hour urine, typical excretion is about 40–220 mmol (mEq) per day. For a spot (random) urine, concentrations vary widely with intake and hydration but commonly range roughly 20–200 mmol/L; values below ~20 mmol/L suggest sodium conservation, while very high values reflect high intake or diuretic use. Clinical context matters.

How do you treat urine sodium in Visit Clinic?plus

Urine sodium guides treatment of sodium disorders. Low urine Na (<20 mmol/L) suggests extrarenal volume loss — treat with isotonic IV fluids and replace losses. High urine Na (>40 mmol/L) indicates renal salt wasting, diuretics, or SIADH — stop offending drugs, use fluid restriction for SIADH, or give sodium replacement if needed. In severe symptomatic hyponatremia, use controlled hypertonic saline and monitor closely.

What is urine sodium used for in Visit Clinic?plus

Urine sodium measures how much sodium the kidneys excrete and helps evaluate a patient’s fluid and salt balance. It’s used to distinguish causes of hyponatremia and acute kidney injury (prerenal vs intrinsic), assess diuretic response, and guide management in heart failure, cirrhosis, and renal disease. Spot urine sodium or fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) aid clinical decisions about volume status and therapy.

How to reduce sodium in urine in Visit Clinic?plus

Lower urinary sodium by cutting dietary salt: avoid processed/fast foods, ready meals, cured meats and salty snacks; read nutrition labels and choose low‑sodium or no‑added‑salt products. Cook from scratch using herbs, lemon and spices instead of salt; rinse canned foods. Eat potassium‑rich fruits and vegetables, stay well hydrated, and discuss medications or underlying conditions with your clinician.

Does high sodium mean kidney failure in Visit Clinic?plus

High sodium levels do not automatically mean kidney failure. Elevated sodium often reflects dehydration, excess salt intake, hormonal or fluid-balance issues; kidneys normally regulate sodium, but persistent high sodium can strain kidneys and contribute to hypertension and long-term kidney damage. Conversely, acute or chronic kidney dysfunction can cause sodium abnormalities. Evaluate symptoms and get medical tests to determine the cause and appropriate treatment.