Leukocytes in Urine
UrináliseÚltima revisão: 7 de abril de 2026. Abordagem de fontes: contexto padrão de interpretação laboratorial, material médico de referência e orientações clínicas ou de saúde pública quando relevantes.
O que é Leukocytes in Urine?
Leukocytes, or white blood cells, in urine indicate the presence of an immune response within the urinary tract. While a few white blood cells can normally be found in urine, elevated numbers—a condition called pyuria—typically signal infection, inflammation, or irritation somewhere along the urinary system. The most commonly detected type is the neutrophil, which is the body's first-line defender against bacterial infections. Leukocytes in urine are detected through both microscopic examination (counting cells per high-power field) and through the leukocyte esterase test on a urine dipstick.
The leukocyte esterase dipstick test detects an enzyme released by neutrophils and is a highly sensitive screening tool for urinary tract infections. When combined with the nitrite test, positive leukocyte esterase results have strong predictive value for UTI. However, leukocytes can be present in urine for reasons other than bacterial infection, including kidney stones, interstitial nephritis, glomerulonephritis, and bladder tumors. The combination of findings from the complete urinalysis helps narrow the differential diagnosis and guide further testing.
Por que isso importa
Leukocytes in urine are the most sensitive indicator of urinary tract inflammation and infection. Urinary tract infections affect approximately 150 million people worldwide each year, and the detection of pyuria is central to their diagnosis and management. Beyond infection, persistent sterile pyuria (leukocytes without bacteria) can be a clue to more serious conditions including kidney disease, tuberculosis of the urinary tract, or urologic malignancy. In hospitalized and catheterized patients, monitoring urine leukocytes helps guide antibiotic therapy and distinguish between true infection and colonization.
Faixas de referência normais
| Grupo | Faixa | Unidade |
|---|---|---|
| Microscopic exam | 0–5 | WBC/HPF |
| Dipstick (leukocyte esterase) | Negative |
As faixas de referência podem variar entre laboratórios. Sempre compare seus resultados com as faixas fornecidas pelo seu local de exame.
O que significam níveis altos de WBC/UA
Causas comuns
- Urinary tract infection (most common cause)
- Kidney infection (pyelonephritis)
- Kidney stones
- Interstitial nephritis (drug-induced or autoimmune)
- Glomerulonephritis
- Bladder cancer or other urologic malignancy
- Sexually transmitted infections (chlamydia, gonorrhea)
- Prostatitis in men
Possíveis sintomas
- Painful or burning urination
- Increased urinary frequency and urgency
- Cloudy or milky urine
- Foul-smelling urine
- Pelvic or lower back pain
- Fever and chills (if kidney infection)
- Blood in urine
O que fazer: Elevated leukocytes with bacteria and symptoms point toward a UTI requiring antibiotic treatment. A urine culture should be obtained to identify the causative organism and guide antibiotic selection. If leukocytes are elevated but cultures are negative (sterile pyuria), further investigation is needed—this may include testing for sexually transmitted infections, tuberculosis culture, imaging of the urinary tract, or referral to a urologist or nephrologist depending on the clinical scenario.
O que significam níveis baixos de WBC/UA
Causas comuns
- Normal finding—healthy urine should contain very few white blood cells
- Successful treatment of a urinary tract infection
- Resolution of kidney or bladder inflammation
Possíveis sintomas
- No symptoms—few or no leukocytes is the normal expected result
O que fazer: A normal leukocyte count in urine requires no further action. If this result follows treatment for a UTI, it confirms successful resolution of the infection.
Quando o exame de WBC/UA é recomendado?
- When UTI symptoms are present (pain, urgency, frequency)
- As part of a routine urinalysis
- When monitoring response to antibiotic therapy for UTI
- In the evaluation of unexplained fever
- When kidney stones or kidney disease is suspected
- During pregnancy screening
Perguntas frequentes
Biomarcadores relacionados
Referências e abordagem de revisão
As páginas do glossário de biomarcadores são explicações educativas e devem ser interpretadas junto com as faixas de referência e observações fornecidas pelo seu laboratório e pelo seu médico. Para conhecer nossos padrões editoriais e processo de revisão, veja nossa Política editorial e a nossa revisão de conteúdo.
Quer analisar seus níveis de WBC/UA?
Envie seus resultados de exames para receber uma análise instantânea com IA de todos os seus biomarcadores.
Enviar resultados de exames →Aviso médico: Estas informações são apenas educativas e não substituem orientação, diagnóstico ou tratamento médico profissional. As faixas de referência podem variar entre laboratórios. Sempre converse com seu profissional de saúde sobre a interpretação dos seus resultados específicos.