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. 2019 Jul 12;15(1):242.
doi: 10.1186/s12917-019-1998-2.

The diagnostic performance of human urinary dipsticks to estimate urine pH, specific gravity (SpG), and protein in horses: are they reliable?

Affiliations

The diagnostic performance of human urinary dipsticks to estimate urine pH, specific gravity (SpG), and protein in horses: are they reliable?

Fatemeh Hekmatynia et al. BMC Vet Res. .

Abstract

Background: Urinalysis is a critical diagnostic test which is performed in routine veterinary medicine practice. In this diagnostic test, semiquantitative measurement of urine biochemical substances is carried out using urinary dipstick. In the current study, we evaluated the diagnostic performance of human urinary dipsticks to estimate pH, specific gravity (SpG), and protein in 80 urine specimens collected from horses. These parameters were measured using two commercial human dipsticks (KP and MN in abbreviation) and quantitative reference methods. The reference methods for pH, SpG, and protein were pH meter, handheld refractometer, and pyrogallol red method, respectively. The correlation between the semiquantitative dipstick analysis and quantitative reference methods was determined using Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.

Results: In general, our results revealed that the both human urinary dipsticks are unreliable tests for urinary pH, SpG, and protein content in horses. The analysis indicated that there was a poor correlation between the urine dipsticks and reference method (KP: rS = 0.534 and MN: rs = 0.485, Ps < 0.001) for protein. Additionally, there was a weak correlation between the results of pH measured using the urine dipsticks and reference method (KP: rS = 0.445 and MN: rs = 0.370, Ps < 0.001). Similar findings were obtained for SpG (KP: rS = 0.285, MN: rs = 0.338, Ps < 0.001). The estimation of proteinuria using the human dipsticks in horses lacked specificity, as many false positive protein results were obtained.

Conclusion: We observed that the human commercial urinary dipsticks used in this study were not reliable to correctly estimate urine protein, SpG, and pH in horses.

Keywords: Horse; Human urinary dipstick; Protein; Specific gravity; pH.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Scatterplot depicting the relationship between pH measured by human urinary dipsticks (x-axis) and by reference methods (y-axis). Upper and lower pictures indicate KP and MN human urinary dipsticks, respectively
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Scatterplot depicting the relationship between SpG measured by human urinary dipsticks (x-axis) and by reference methods (y-axis). Upper and lower pictures indicate KP and MN human urinary dipsticks, respectively

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