Routine and Microscopy,
Depo Provera does not show up in routine blood or urine testing. You'd have to go out of your way to find it via lab tests.
Yes. Because glucose is not usually found in urine. But greater than normal levels of glucose don't necessarily mean the diabetes. It may be a sign of Glucose release from the kidneys into the urine (renal glycosuria) or pregnancy. If so, further testing is needed.More information is on Freetxno1.com.
Frozen urine can typically be stored for up to 6 months before it becomes unusable for testing or analysis.
In the absence of symptoms or known disease, routine screening urinarlysis in healthy patients has been found to not be useful in detecting medical disease.
Yes, it is possible to freeze urine. Urine can be frozen for various reasons, such as for medical testing or research purposes. When frozen, urine can be stored for future analysis or testing.
URE, UA (urine routine examination), (Urine Analysis)
Bernard A Gropper has written: 'Developing drug testing by hair analysis' -- subject(s): Analysis, Hair, Urine, Drug testing
No. Routine urinalysis only tests for the specific gravity (sort of like the density of urine), and the presence or absence of protein, sugar, and blood. Drug testing is an entirely different process.
Urine can typically be stored for up to 24 hours at room temperature before it becomes unsuitable for testing or analysis. After this time, changes in the composition of the urine may affect the accuracy of test results. It is recommended to refrigerate urine if it cannot be tested within 24 hours.
To get tested for chlamydia, you must ask specifically for that test. Routine urinalysis or culture does not detect chlamydia.Chlamydia testing requires a specific test. Urine testing done for other purposes will not detect chlamydia.
Charles Godwin Jennings has written: 'Practical urine testing' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Analysis, Urine