Is a pathologic urinary tubular pattern of 0.13 normal?

A pathologic urinary tubular pattern of 0.13 is normal; the normal range for a pathologic tubular pattern is 0-1.5, and if it is greater than 1.5 it is an elevated pathologic tubular pattern.
Urinary tubular patterns are cylindrical aggregates of solidified material in the urine that may be protein fragments, cellular fragments, or bacterial fragments. The main common pathologic patterns are leukocyte, erythrocyte, fat, and bacterial patterns.
Leukocytosis refers to the presence of large numbers of leukocytes exuding from the urine and is usually seen in diseases such as pyelonephritis.
Erythrocytic tubular pattern is commonly seen in acute glomerulonephritis, tubular necrosis, and renal transplant rejection.
Fatty tubular pattern refers to the presence of a large number of fat glomeruli in the urine, which can be seen in nephrotic syndrome, acute exacerbation of chronic glomerulonephritis and other renal tubular diseases.
Bacterial tubular pattern refers to a large number of bacterial and fungal necrotic material in the urine, which can be seen in acute pyelonephritis, renal cortical abscess and other infectious diseases.
Patients with abnormal urinary tubular pattern should go to the hospital in time, improve the examination under the guidance of professional physicians, clarify the cause and timely treatment.