Comparison of characteristics of urine specimens at physiological state versus post-artificial heating at the National Traditional Medicine Hospital, Bhutan

Authors

  • Karma Ugyen National Traditional Medicine Hospital, Thimphu, Bhutan
  • Nima Dema National Traditional Medicine Hospital, Thimphu, Bhutan
  • Damcho Wangchuk Traditional Medicine Unit, Wangdicholing Hospital, Bumthang, Bhutan
  • Sangay Thinley Traditional Medicine Unit, Eastern Regional Referral Hospital, Mongar, Bhutan
  • Tempa Gyeltshen Faculty of Traditional Medicine, Khesar Gyalpo University of Medical Sciences of Bhutan, Thimphu, Bhutan https://orcid.org/0009-0001-2859-4555
  • Sherab Tenzin Menjong Sorig Pharmaceuticals, Thimphu, Bhutan
  • Karma Tenzin Faculty of Postgraduate Medicine, Khesar Gyalpo University of Medical Sciences of Bhutan, Thimphu, Bhutan https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9328-2312

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47811/bsj.0013050815

Keywords:

Diagnosis; Traditional Medicine; Observation; Urinalysis; Urinary Sediment Analysis

Abstract

Introduction: Urine reflects the body’s functional status playing a central role in the diagnosis of disease conditions. This study aimed to compare six of the nine features of urine at physiological and lukewarm states after artificial heating – colour, odour, steam, bubbles, sediment, and frothiness.
Method: This comparative study utilized the Bhutan Analysis System for Urine Properties (BASUP) chart. The study was conducted from July 2021 to January 2022 at the Eastern Regional Referral Hospital, Wangdicholing District Hospital, and the National Traditional Medicine Hospital. The properties of urine were evaluated soon after collection at physiological state. After the urine specimen had cooled down to room temperature, it was heated to body temperature following a standard procedure for reassessment of its properties.
Results: A total of 91 specimens from 35 men and 56 women were analysed. There were no significant differences observed in the colour, odour, steam, bubbles, sediment, or frothiness between physiological and artificially heated specimens. However, there were differences in the colours of དམར་ཤས་ ཆེ་བ། (Marshechewa) with p = 0.023 and སེར་ཤས་ ཆེ་བ། (Sershechewa) with p = 0.015.
Conclusion: The study found no significant differences in the majority of the properties of urine in specimens at physiological state and after artificial heating. However, further studies are required to evaluate the physicochemical properties and the differences in the Marshechewa and Sershechewa colours noted.

Published

11/11/2024

How to Cite

Ugyen, K., Nima Dema, Wangchuk, D., Thinley, S., Gyeltshen, T., Tenzin, S., & Tenzin, K. (2024). Comparison of characteristics of urine specimens at physiological state versus post-artificial heating at the National Traditional Medicine Hospital, Bhutan. Bhutan Sorig Journal, 1(2), 4–13. https://doi.org/10.47811/bsj.0013050815

Issue

Section

Research Article