High BUN occurs in chronic
glomerulonephritis, pyelonephritis and other causes of chronic renal
disease; with acute renal failure, decreased renal perfusion (prerenal
azotemia) as in shock. With urinary tract obstruction BUN increases
(postrenal azotemia), for example as caused by neoplastic infiltration
of the ureters, hyperplasia or carcinoma of the prostate. BUN is useful
to follow hemodialysis and other therapy. “Uremia” was defined by Luke
as an expression of a constellation of signs and symptoms in patients
with severe azotemia secondary to acute or chronic renal failure.1
Causes of increased BUN include severe congestive heart failure,
catabolism, tetracyclines with diuretic use, hyperalimentation,
ketoacidosis, and dehydration as in diabetes mellitus, but even moderate
dehydration can cause BUN to increase. Corticosteroids tend to increase
BUN by causing protein catabolism. Bleeding from the gastrointestinal
tract is an important cause of high urea nitrogen, commonly accompanied
by elevation of BUN:creatinine ratio. Nephrotoxic drugs must be
considered.
Borderline high values may occur after recent ingestion of high protein meal and muscle wasting may cause an elevation as well.
With creatinine, BUN is used to monitor patients on dialysis.
Low BUN
occurs in normal pregnancy, decreased protein intake, with intravenous
fluids, with some antibiotics, and in some but not all instances of
liver disease.
As described by DeCaux et al in 1980, in the
syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH):
findings include hyponatremia with serum or plasma Na+ =128
mmol/L, hypo-osmolality (<260 mOsm/kg with urine osmolality >300
mOsm/kg) with low BUN. Such findings occur in situations in which
patients are overhydrated. Clinical findings included absence of edema
or evidence of heart, liver, thyroid, renal or adrenal disease.2
Hypouricemia, with uric acid levels in 16 of 17 patients <4 mg/dL,
is reported with the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic
hormone.3 (SIADH can be seen with higher serum sodiums and
higher osmolalities. Urine osmolality is greater than serum osmolality
in SIADH. DeCaux in 1982 presented criteria modified from the 1980
paper.4)
Osmolality (mOsm/kg H2O) is calculated as follows:
Osmolality = [Na+ (mmol/L)] x [2 + glucose (mg/dL)] / 18 + [BUN (mg/dL) / 2.8]