Urobilinogen 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 Urobilinogen in Urine?
Urobilinogen is a colorless byproduct of bilirubin metabolism. When red blood cells are broken down, hemoglobin is converted to unconjugated bilirubin, which the liver conjugates and excretes into bile. In the intestines, gut bacteria convert conjugated bilirubin to urobilinogen. Most urobilinogen is excreted in the stool (where it is further converted to stercobilinogen, giving stool its brown color), but approximately 20% is reabsorbed into the bloodstream through the enterohepatic circulation and either re-excreted by the liver or filtered by the kidneys into urine.
Urine urobilinogen is routinely measured as part of a standard urinalysis dipstick and reflects the interplay between red blood cell turnover, liver function, and intestinal bacterial metabolism. Normal urine contains small amounts of urobilinogen (0.1–1.0 mg/dL). Abnormal levels—either elevated or absent—provide important diagnostic clues about hemolytic conditions, liver disease, and biliary obstruction. It is one of the few urinalysis parameters where both high and absent results are clinically significant.
Por que isso importa
Urobilinogen in urine serves as an indirect marker of liver function and hemolytic activity. Elevated urinary urobilinogen suggests either increased red blood cell destruction (hemolysis), which produces excess bilirubin for bacterial conversion, or liver dysfunction (hepatitis, cirrhosis), where the liver fails to recapture reabsorbed urobilinogen from the blood. Conversely, absent urinary urobilinogen strongly suggests biliary obstruction—if bile cannot reach the intestines, no urobilinogen can be produced. This simple, inexpensive dipstick test can provide early clues to serious conditions including hemolytic anemia, viral hepatitis, and bile duct obstruction from gallstones or tumors.
Faixas de referência normais
| Grupo | Faixa | Unidade |
|---|---|---|
| Adults | 0.1–1.0 | mg/dL |
| Trace normal | ≤1.0 | Ehrlich units |
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 UBG
Causas comuns
- Hemolytic anemia (increased red blood cell destruction)
- Hepatitis (viral, alcoholic, drug-induced)
- Cirrhosis
- Congestive heart failure (hepatic congestion)
- Malaria and other infections causing hemolysis
- Pernicious anemia
- Medications (sulfonamides, chloroquine)
Possíveis sintomas
- Dark urine
- Jaundice (yellowing of skin and eyes)
- Fatigue and weakness
- Abdominal pain (in liver disease)
- Pale or jaundiced complexion
- Nausea and loss of appetite
O que fazer: Elevated urobilinogen warrants liver function testing (AST, ALT, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase), a complete blood count with reticulocyte count to evaluate for hemolysis, and peripheral blood smear. If hemolysis is confirmed, investigate the underlying cause (autoimmune, hereditary, medication-related). If liver disease is suspected, further imaging and serological testing may be needed. Refer to gastroenterology or hematology as appropriate.
O que significam níveis baixos de UBG
Causas comuns
- Complete biliary obstruction (gallstones, pancreatic head tumor, cholangiocarcinoma)
- Broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy (destroys gut bacteria that produce urobilinogen)
- Severe cholestasis
Possíveis sintomas
- Pale, clay-colored stools (absence of stercobilinogen)
- Dark, tea-colored urine (from conjugated bilirubin, not urobilinogen)
- Jaundice
- Itching (pruritus from bile salt deposition)
- Abdominal pain, especially right upper quadrant
O que fazer: Absent urobilinogen with clay-colored stools and jaundice is a red flag for biliary obstruction requiring urgent evaluation. Order liver function tests, direct and indirect bilirubin, and imaging (abdominal ultrasound, MRCP, or CT scan) to identify the site and cause of obstruction. Biliary obstruction from gallstones may require ERCP or surgery. Obstruction from tumors requires oncological evaluation and staging.
Quando o exame de UBG é recomendado?
- As part of routine urinalysis
- When jaundice or dark urine is present
- When liver disease is suspected
- To help differentiate obstructive from non-obstructive jaundice
- When hemolytic anemia is being evaluated
- In patients on hepatotoxic medications
Perguntas frequentes
Biomarcadores relacionados
Leitura relacionada
Condições
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.
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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.