Kidney Function Test

Kidney Function Test (KFT / RFT) – Complete Guide

The Kidney Function Test (KFT), also known as the Renal Function Test (RFT), is essential for evaluating how well the kidneys are working. It measures waste products, electrolytes, and filtration markers to detect kidney damage, monitor chronic kidney disease, and assess overall renal health. This guide explains what KFT includes, why it matters, how to interpret results, what limitations exist, and how TestPro360 simplifies reporting for kidney patients.


What Is a Kidney Function Test (KFT / RFT)?

A Kidney Function Test measures various biochemical markers in the blood that reflect kidney performance. These markers help detect diseases early, monitor progression, and evaluate treatment response.

KFT Typically Includes:

  • Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN/Urea): Waste product from protein breakdown

  • Creatinine: Most reliable indicator of kidney filtration

  • Uric Acid: Associated with gout and kidney stones

  • Electrolytes (Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻): Maintain fluid balance and nerve function

  • Calcium & Phosphorus: Linked to bone and kidney metabolism

  • eGFR (Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate): Calculates kidney performance and CKD staging


Why Is KFT Important?

The kidneys perform crucial functions: filtering waste, maintaining fluid balance, regulating blood pressure, and managing minerals. KFT is important because it helps to:

 Detect Kidney Damage Early

Changes appear before symptoms, allowing preventive care.

 Monitor Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Staging from CKD Stage 1 to Stage 5.

 Evaluate High-Risk Patients

Common in:

  • Diabetes

  • Hypertension

  • Heart disease

 Diagnose Dehydration or Fluid Overload

 Assess Drug Toxicity

Especially important for:

  • Painkillers

  • Antibiotics

  • Chemotherapy drugs

 Detect Electrolyte Imbalances

Life-threatening for:

  • Heart rhythm

  • Nerve function

 Pre-Surgical Evaluation

Ensures kidneys can handle anesthesia and medications.


Normal Ranges for KFT Parameters

ParameterNormal Range
Blood Urea (BUN)7–20 mg/dL
Creatinine0.6–1.3 mg/dL
Uric Acid3.5–7.2 mg/dL (men), 2.6–6.0 mg/dL (women)
Sodium (Na⁺)135–145 mEq/L
Potassium (K⁺)3.5–5.1 mEq/L
Chloride (Cl⁻)98–107 mEq/L
Calcium8.5–10.2 mg/dL
Phosphorus2.5–4.5 mg/dL
eGFR≥ 90 mL/min/1.73m² (Normal)

(Values may vary slightly based on analyzer and laboratory reference ranges.)


Formulas Used in KFT

1. eGFR (Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate)

Calculated using the CKD-EPI formula based on:

  • Creatinine

  • Age

  • Gender

Used to stage chronic kidney disease.

2. Urea-to-Creatinine Ratio

 
Urea / Creatinine

Helps differentiate:

  • Pre-renal causes (dehydration)

  • Renal causes (kidney injury)

  • Post-renal causes (obstruction)

3. Corrected Sodium

Used in high glucose patients to assess true sodium levels.


How to Interpret KFT Results

Blood Urea (BUN)

High:

  • Kidney dysfunction

  • Dehydration

  • Heart failure

Low:

  • Liver disease

  • Low protein intake


Creatinine

High:

  • Reduced kidney filtration

  • Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)

  • Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Low:

  • Low muscle mass

  • Not usually clinically significant


Uric Acid

High:

  • Gout

  • Kidney stones

  • High protein diet

Low:

  • Rare; may relate to medication or genetics


Electrolytes (Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻)

  • High Potassium (Hyperkalemia): Life-threatening; kidney failure

  • Low Sodium (Hyponatremia): Fluid imbalance, hormonal disorders

  • High Sodium (Hypernatremia): Dehydration


Calcium & Phosphorus

Abnormal levels may indicate:

  • Parathyroid disorders

  • Chronic kidney disease


eGFR

  • eGFR < 60 → Possible CKD

  • eGFR < 15 → Kidney failure (dialysis may be required)


What KFT Cannot Detect

To ensure transparency, patients should know the limitations:

  •  Cannot determine the exact cause of kidney damage
  •  Cannot detect kidney stones (ultrasound/CT required)
  •  Cannot diagnose UTIs (urine test needed)
  •  Cannot measure kidney size or structural issues
  •  Cannot detect tumors or cysts
  •  Cannot accurately show hydration status alone
  •  Cannot measure hormonal causes (requires endocrine testing)

KFT supports diagnosis, but imaging and urine tests complete the evaluation.


How TestPro360 Helps Manage KFT Reports

TestPro360 offers powerful tools designed specifically for Kidney Function Test reporting.

1. Auto-Calculation & CKD Stage Classification

TestPro360 automatically calculates eGFR and labels CKD Stage (1–5), highlighting the stage for quick interpretation.


2. Urea/Creatinine Ratio Auto-Analysis

Automatically calculates and flags patterns suggesting:

  • Pre-renal causes

  • Renal injury

  • Post-renal obstruction


3. Critical Electrolyte Alerts

Dangerous values are highlighted instantly:

  • K⁺ > 6.0 mEq/L

  • Na⁺ < 125 mEq/L


4. Trend Monitoring for Chronic Kidney Patients

Graphs show creatinine and eGFR trends over:

  • Months

  • Quarters

  • Years

Ideal for CKD progression tracking.


5. Two-Panel Visual Display

Reports clearly separate:

  • Filtration markers (Urea, Creatinine, Uric Acid)

  • Electrolytes (Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻)

  • Minerals (Calcium, Phosphorus)

Color-coded for easy understanding.


6. Smart Commenting for Abnormal Patterns

Automatic interpretation notes:

  • “Elevated creatinine — possible renal impairment”

  • “Low sodium — consider fluid imbalance”

  • “eGFR < 60 suggests reduced kidney function”


7. Analyzer Integration

All KFT parameters are imported seamlessly from biochemistry analyzers into TestPro360.


8. ABDM-Linked Long-Term Storage

Patients can store reports securely in their ABHA Health Locker for long-term tracking.


Conclusion

The Kidney Function Test is essential for detecting kidney damage, staging chronic kidney disease, and monitoring patients at risk. Although it has limitations, KFT remains a key screening tool when supported with clinical evaluation and imaging. With TestPro360, laboratories can automate calculations, flag critical results, visualize trends, and deliver clear, accurate, and professional kidney reports.

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