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Apex Nursing

Chart — Renal

Hematuria Causes & Evaluation

Blood in the urine has many causes — the clues that sort them are pain, color, and company. The one rule to remember: painless gross hematuria is bladder cancer until proven otherwise.

Educational use only. Hematuria always warrants provider evaluation to find the source. This chart is an educational aid, not a diagnostic protocol. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Causes & Distinguishing Clues

CauseDistinguishing clueNursing action
Bladder / kidney cancerPAINLESS gross hematuria (often intermittent), esp. in a smoker/older adultRed flag — needs cystoscopy/urology workup; don't dismiss
UTI / cystitisHematuria with dysuria, frequency, urgency; cloudy/foul urineUrinalysis/culture; treat infection
Kidney stonesHematuria with severe colicky flank pain radiating to groinPain control, hydration, strain urine; non-contrast CT
GlomerulonephritisTea-/cola-colored urine, RBC casts, proteinuria, edema, hypertensionNephrology workup; it's a glomerular (kidney) cause
BPH / prostateHematuria with obstructive urinary symptoms in older menEvaluate prostate; still rule out cancer
Trauma / catheter / exerciseRecent injury, instrumentation, or vigorous exerciseUsually transient; reassess after the cause resolves
Anticoagulation / bleedingOn warfarin/DOAC/antiplatelet; may unmask another causeCheck coagulation; still evaluate the source

Exam Traps

  • PAINLESS gross hematuria (esp. a smoker/older adult) = bladder cancer until proven otherwise — needs workup.
  • Hematuria WITH severe colicky flank pain = kidney stone; WITH dysuria/frequency = UTI.
  • Tea-/cola-colored urine + RBC casts + edema/HTN = glomerulonephritis (a kidney/glomerular cause).
  • Red urine isn't always blood — beets, rifampin, and phenazopyridine can discolor urine.
  • Anticoagulation can cause or unmask hematuria — still evaluate for an underlying source.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines · National Kidney Foundation (NKF). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →