by blythe » Sat Jul 14, 2012 11:28 am
I've heard similar information from other women here - that their doctors take their baseline protein spillage into account to determine a PE diagnosis / when they are getting sick.
I don't have a good handle on when to repeat the 24-hour, it seems like the 24-hour collections are most important for diagnosis, because after that they can rely on the dips to see when your proteinuria has increased a lot. That's a complete guess though, I'd be interested in your doctor's answer and other women's experiences.
I've seen similar breakdowns to what Alviarin listed. I've heard docs say that anything below 300 is normal, and I've also heard docs say anything above zero is actually *not* normal, just not enough to do anything about medically. If I'm remembering right, women who spill protein in the first trimester have been told that they probably have a mild underlying kidney disease or dysfunction that is either always there and no one does 24-hour collections normally so they would never know otherwise, or that the physical demands and changes of pregnancy "unmasks" a mild kidney disease / dysfunction. Does that match what your docs have said for your case?
One thing to be aware of, spilling protein this early is a risk factor for PE. Not a guarantee you'll get sick, but another risk factor. I'm assuming you're seeing an MFM already? I'd ask if a consult with a nephrologist would be appropriate.
I've heard similar information from other women here - that their doctors take their baseline protein spillage into account to determine a PE diagnosis / when they are getting sick.
I don't have a good handle on when to repeat the 24-hour, it seems like the 24-hour collections are most important for diagnosis, because after that they can rely on the dips to see when your proteinuria has increased a lot. That's a complete guess though, I'd be interested in your doctor's answer and other women's experiences.
I've seen similar breakdowns to what Alviarin listed. I've heard docs say that anything below 300 is normal, and I've also heard docs say anything above zero is actually *not* normal, just not enough to do anything about medically. If I'm remembering right, women who spill protein in the first trimester have been told that they probably have a mild underlying kidney disease or dysfunction that is either always there and no one does 24-hour collections normally so they would never know otherwise, or that the physical demands and changes of pregnancy "unmasks" a mild kidney disease / dysfunction. Does that match what your docs have said for your case?
One thing to be aware of, spilling protein this early is a risk factor for PE. Not a guarantee you'll get sick, but another risk factor. I'm assuming you're seeing an MFM already? I'd ask if a consult with a nephrologist would be appropriate.