Hematuria can be either grossly visible (macrohematuria) or just distinguishable under a magnifying lens. Microhematuria is frequently asymptomatic and has a predominance of 4%-5% in routine clinical practice. It very well might be because of a fundamental illness of the kidneys or the urogenital tract. Hematuria has many causes, and an expansive urological and nephrological differential conclusion should be thought of. Without a trace of excellent logical proof, the suggestions of current rules for the analytic assessment of hematuria are not uniform. Microhematuria is supposed to be available when microscopy uncovers at least three erythrocytes for every powerful field. The fundamental indicative assessment comprises of an exhaustive history and actual assessment, estimation of incendiary boundaries and renal capacity tests, and ultrasonography of the kidneys and bladder.
Muhammad Abdul
Journal of Clinical & Experimental Nephrology received 387 citations as per google scholar report