Renal glucosuria is the excretion of glucose in the urine in the presence of normal plasma glucose levels.
Renal glucosuria can be inherited. This form usually involves a reduction in the glucose transport maximum (the maximum rate at which glucose can be resorbed) and subsequent escape of glucose in the urine. The inherited disorder is usually transmitted as an incompletely recessive trait (heterozygotes have modest glucosuria).
Renal glucosuria may occur without any other abnormalities of renal function or as part of a generalized defect in proximal tubule function (Fanconi syndrome Fanconi Syndrome Fanconi syndrome consists of multiple defects in renal proximal tubular reabsorption, causing glucosuria, phosphaturia, generalized aminoaciduria, and bicarbonate wasting. It may be hereditary... read more ). It also may occur with various systemic disorders, including cystinosis, Wilson disease Wilson Disease Wilson disease results in accumulation of copper in the liver and other organs. Hepatic or neurologic symptoms develop. Diagnosis is based on a low serum ceruloplasmin level, high urinary excretion... read more , hereditary tyrosinemia Tyrosine Metabolism Disorders Tyrosine is an amino acid that is a precursor of several neurotransmitters (eg, dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine), hormones (eg, thyroxine), and melanin; deficiencies of enzymes involved... read more , and oculocerebrorenal syndrome (Lowe syndrome).
Symptoms and Signs of Renal Glucosuria
Renal glucosuria is asymptomatic and without serious sequelae. However, if there is an associated generalized defect in proximal tubular function, symptoms and signs may include hypophosphatemic rickets, volume depletion, short stature, muscle hypotonia, and ocular changes of cataracts or glaucoma (oculocerebrorenal syndrome) or Kayser-Fleischer rings (Wilson disease). With such findings, transport defects other than glucosuria should be sought.
Diagnosis of Renal Glucosuria
Urinalysis
The disorder is typically initially noted on routine urinalysis, and is defined as glucosuria in the absence of hyperglycemia (serum glucose <140 mg/dL).
Some experts require a normal result on an oral glucose tolerance test for the diagnosis.
Treatment of Renal Glucosuria
No treatment needed
Isolated renal glucosuria is benign; no treatment is necessary.