
Urinary or urine casts in urine routine examination are completed in the following steps- First request the patient to bring a urine specimen. After the arrival of the specimen in the clinical laboratory, take nearly 5 ml of urine and centrifuge it. Put a drop of the mixed sediment part on a clean and grease-free glass slide and place a coverslip over it. Examine the entire 22- by 22-mm coverslip systematically with the low power objective (10X ) and low light intensity. If any suspicious objects are encountered, examine them with the high dry objective (40X). The common urinary casts faced during urine microscopy are hyaline casts, granular casts, fatty casts, waxy casts, white blood cell casts/WBC casts, bacterial casts, and crystal casts.
The hyaline cast is a type of urinary cast that is simple and most commonly found, which is a cluster of urinary particles, such as cells, fat bodies, or microorganisms, held together by a protein matrix and found in the urine. It can be seen in both healthy and pathological conditions.
Appear as clear, tiny tubule-shaped particles
Not a dangerous finding, Strenuous exercise, diuretic medications, severe vomiting, or fever. But large amounts of hyaline casts may indicate kidney damage due to decreased blood flow to the kidneys.
The granular cast is a cast that contains either proteins, tubular cells, or leukocytes that have broken down.
Exercise or dehydration, acute tubular necrosis.
It is formed by the breakdown of lipid-rich epithelial cells, these are hyaline casts free globules of fat or oval fat bodies inclusions, yellowish-tan in color.
There is the presence of refractile lipid droplets within the protein matrix of the cast.
Fatty cast in urinary sediment is faced in various clinical conditions like high urinary protein nephrotic syndrome, diabetic or lupus nephropathy or toxic renal poisoning, or larger-scale necrosis or epithelial cell death.
Stain: Fatty cast has globules of fat, either as triglyceride or neutral fat, that stains with fat stain, or as cholesterol, which will unify as a Maltese cross.
It is a form of urinary cast consisting of homogeneous proteinaceous material that has a high refractive index, in contrast to the low refractive index of hyaline casts; waxy casts probably represent an advanced stage of the disintegrative process that results in coarsely and finely granular casts and are usually indicative of advanced renal disease.
Broken off or blunt ends, notched and sharp margins, lateral cracks, high refractive index, and a surface whose appearance is reminiscent of that of melted wax.
Amyloidosis, post-infectious glomerulonephritis, and frequent association in increased levels of serum creatinine
White blood cell casts or WBC casts in routine urinalysis refer to a hyaline matrix cast bearing neutrophil inclusions.
WBCs in a cast
Tubular disease, especially infection and acute pyelonephritis
Crystal Casts are crystallized urinary solutes, such as oxalates, urates, sulphonamides, etc., that may become enmeshed within a ketanaline cast during its formation.
Crystals in a cast
They show little clinical significance.
RBC casts in routine urinalysis refer to a hyaline matrix cast bearing erythrocyte inclusions.
RBCs in a cast
RBC casts are seen in glomerular disease, acute glomerulitis, renal infarction, severe pyelonephritis, and subacute bacterial endocarditis.
Composed of renal epithelial cells
Renal epithelial cells in a cast
They are involved in acute tubular necrosis, viral diseases such as infection with cytomegalovirus, and exposure to nephrotoxic substances such as mercury, ethylene glycol, and drugs.