How many non-homogeneous red blood cells is nephritis

Non-homogeneous red blood cells greater than 80% is called glomerulogenic hematuria, which is mostly seen in various glomerular diseases, such as acute or chronic nephritis or acute progressive glomerulonephritis, purpura nephritis and lupus nephritis, etc. It needs to be treated according to the patient’s symptoms and signs, especially whether it is accompanied by proteinuria. If it is also accompanied by severe proteinuria, it needs to be treated with hormones combined with cytotoxic drugs. If it is just simple hematuria, seen in conditions such as thin basement membrane or lgA nephropathy, it needs to be further treated according to the type of pathology of the patient. If it is homogeneous hematuria, it is mostly seen in hematuria caused by pyelonephritis, cystitis, stones, and tumors. Patients who have hematuria need to do the morphology of urine red blood cells to identify whether it is of nephrogenic or non-nephrogenic origin.