Talk:Creatinine

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for this phrase: "A rise in blood creatinine level is observed only with marked damage to functioning nephrons. Therefore, this test is unsuitable for detecting early-stage kidney disease. A better estimation of kidney function is given by calculating the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). eGFR can be accurately calculated using serum creatinine concentration and some or all of the following variables: sex, age, weight, and race, as suggested by the American Diabetes Association without a 24-hour urine collection"

This doesn't make sense. The blood creatinine level is the basis of the eGFR, so the paragraph is contradicting itself. MG

For this phrase: "While a baseline serum creatinine of 2.0 md/dL may indicate normal kidney function in a male body builder, a serum creatinine of 0.7 md/dL can indicate significant renal disease in a frail old woman." A creatinine of 0.7 mg/dL is normal for a small frail woman. A level of 2.0 mg/dL would indicate severe kidney disease in the old woman. The more muscle mass you have, and the more you use those muscles, the more more creatinine you should excrete. A frail old woman is expected to have very low creatinine levels. [[[Special:Contributions/24.250.22.201|24.250.22.201]] (talk) 19:22, 5 October 2008 (UTC)][reply]

On the lines that follow in this article. Are the units supposed to be mg/dL instead of md/dL?

While a baseline serum creatinine of 2.0 md/dL may indicate normal kidney function in a male body builder, a serum creatinine of 0.7 md/dL can indicate significant renal disease in a frail old woman"

They are. Just a typo on my part. I've fixed it. Richardsur 23:36, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Anybody know if μmol/L is really the SI unit of creatinine? I thought the differences were more based on region than anything else since mg/dL also uses SI/metric units. Richardsur 23:49, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)

According to the JAMA instruction to authors the SI units for creatinine are µmol/L. 

To convert use the following: Creatinine 1 mg/dL = 88.4 µmol/L

Are the reference ranges for serum (or e.g. urinary) creatinine?

Sports medicine[edit]

Elevated creatinine levels due to supplemental creatine might result in mis-diagnosis. Most doctors (general practitioners) appear unaware of creatine as a body building supplement. They are apt to diagnose non-existent kidney conditions in healthy patients taking creatine supplements. Mention should be made, under Diagnostic Use, of supplemental creatine as a possible source of elevated creatinine levels in healthy individuals. Mseslacker 21:39, 4 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Last line states body builders take supplemental creatine. This section is about creatinine, isn't it a different material? Dkronst 22:39, 26 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yes and no. Creatinine is different, but it is the breakdown product of creatine, which is taken by bodybuilders. but the comment does seem out of place. 130.123.128.117 22:29, 25 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

With creatine supplementation I assume one would have increased levels of creatinine. Does that actually stress the kidneys?

No. Creatinine is freely filtered at the glomerular apparatus. While increased levels in a normal individual is a sign of impaired filtering, the increased creatinine does not harm or stress the kidneys in any way. So, having a high level of creatinine is only a sign of a problem, but is not a problem. Rjkd12 21:07, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Creatinine levels[edit]

I was diagnosed with CKD in late September. My Creatinine level is 3.0 My mother also has CKD and her Creatinine level is 3.2 She is currently in stage 4 and within months of total renal failure. My question is how high will my levels get before renal failure? I have a mesomorph body type and carry a high % of muscle mass.

why leg cramps?[edit]

why high levels cause leg cramps? what is the pathophysiological reason for this? including some biochem rxn reasons or molec cell explanations. Why in the legs and not other places? what about joint problems? what is causing the muscle pain? And then, shouldn't there be better linking to diseases and treatments to kidney problems?

Creatinine nor creatine causes cramps. This is one of the oldest myths around. Cramps are neurological in nature and have to do with muscle spindles and golgi tendon organs.
It is also freely filtered at the glomerular apparatus, so it doesn't "stress" the kidneys to excrete large amounts, nor is high levels bad at all. A high urniary creatinine level is no more indicative of renal failure than urinating a lot for a few days is indicative of having diabetes. Rjkd12 16:21, 28 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

SMILES formula[edit]

If anyone needs it for a later infobox, Creatinine's SMILES formula is CN1CC(=O)NC1=N. That's C4H7N3O, a molecular weight of about 113. 71.41.210.146 00:45, 2 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

potential inaccuracy[edit]

This page says:

Vegetarians tend to have lower creatinine levels, because vegetables contain no creatinine.

This is contradicted on WebMD:

Creatinine is made at a steady rate and is not affected by diet or by normal physical activities.
http://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/creatinine-and-creatinine-clearance —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.188.141.76 (talk) 00:04, 23 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

WebMD is in error. (talk) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.205.75.125 (talk) 13:35, 29 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

As a layperson, I also found this assertation to be subspect without a reference and/or additional information. If WebMD is truly in error, a citation could help greatly. In the meantime, I added a cite tag. Could someone with expert knowledge please clarify? Jerfgoke (talk) 21:37, 19 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I've found a 1989 study in which creatinine levels of vegetarians and non-vegetarians were compared. I've added the citation to the above statement. Temporal User (Talk) 01:58, 2 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I've taken out the sentence. The citation found by the user above showed lower creatinine values for male vegetarians, and higher creatinine levels for female vegetarians. Perhaps the user was reading the "creatine" line instead of the "creatinine" line? It also had a small sample size. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.23.112.247 (talk) 21:00, 4 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Creatinine high for a old male who is planning to have Bypass heart surgery[edit]

My father is 61 years old and he had a 2nd heart attack, and his creatinine level is 1.8 and now increased to 2.00, so he his not able to undergo angiogram, please suggest some ideas to bring down his creatinine level. and his diabetic is not in control often coming down at very low rate and also increasing at very high rate.

What does low creatinine mean?[edit]

There is a reference range with a nonzero lower bound, but the article talks only about the meaning of high values, not low ones. Perhaps add a sentence about that? Thanks. Briankharvey (talk) 23:27, 14 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Tautomers and nomenclature[edit]

Some of the chemical information in the article is questionable, including the (unreferenced, but ranked) list of named tautomers and some of the structures and names in the linked external datasets listed in the Chemical Infobox. Also, the article does not cover recent publications. An update of the Chemistry section might include:

The general statement that creatinine tautomers are in equilibrium is not really accurate under normal conditions. In aqueous environments, both hydrogen bonding with the inner solvation-shell of water molecules and overall polar-solvent effects stabilise the amino form, with pH also having a significant effect [with high pH increasing ring cleavage to (re)form creatine]. Thus amine-imine tautomerism may not be relevant in a biological context (other than in possible mechanistic routes) and keto-enol tautomerism probably can be disregarded.

The Wikipedia article on Tautomers covers implications for databases, noting the advantages of notation, but this leaves the problem of nomenclature if Creatinine is to be named systematically, since such names are specific to a single structure. Fortunately, on the basis of the above (but not the existing article), it seems reasonable to base the preferred name on the amine structure. Unfortunately, the quality of structural and naming information for Creatinine in the Chemical Infobox and some of the external databases listed is variable, to put it politely and in the light of the text proposed above. To enumerate the points:

  1. IUPAC Preferred Name: Naming of the parent cycle of the 2-amino-4-one and 2-imino-4-one tautomers differs because in the former the ring contains unsaturation, whereas in the latter it is saturated (but with conjugation through the 3-N lone pair), resulting in the stems "diazole" and "diazolidine", respectively, under Hantzsch–Widman rules. In the 2-amino structure, the partial ring saturation is reflected by indicated hydrogen (xH) and "dihydro" terms, with appropriate locants.
  2. Whether "Other names" should just include variants for the 2-amino structure or also for the 2-imino structure is a moot point.
  3. CHEBI:16737 and CHEMBL65567 (Creatinine) give the structure and names of the 2-imino form, as does DrugBank DB11846 and KEGG D03600.
  4. ChemSpider 21640982 (Creatinine) gives the structure and names of the 2-amino-4-hydroxy compound with a doubly unsaturated diazolidine ring.
  5. ECHA InfoCard 100.000.424 and EC number: 200-466-7 use 2-imino-1-methylimidazolidin-4-one as the heading for Creatinine.
  6. MeSH term Creatinine (D003404) - sanity at last!
  7. PubChem CID 26009888 is 2-amino-1-methyl-1H-imidazol-4-ol, an isomer of Creatinine, but according to the reference cited above not a significant tautomer. The PubChem CID for Creatinine is 588; it supplies the 2-amino-4-one structure, but includes the 2-imino form amongst the list of synonyms. It was the illogically of calling Creatinine a minor tautomer of Creatinine that originally suggested that there might be problems in the information for the compound.
  8. UNII: AYI8EX34EU uses the 2-amino structure, but supplies some 2-imino names. The linked Inxight Drugs database has the 2-amino structure but gives 2-Imino-1-methylimidazolidin-4-one as the "Systematic Name", relegating 2-amino names to "Common Name"s!
  9. CompTox Dashboard (EPA) DTXSID8045987 shows the 2-imino structure and provides "IUPAC Name: 2-Imino-1-methylimidazolidin-4-one".

This seems an unsatisfactory situation for the information on a biologically significant compound, with it being unclear why databases prefer a structure that is not normally observed in reality. Is this really the case and what should be done about it? Douglian30 (talk) 16:33, 19 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Men vs. women[edit]

At one point in the article, it claims that women produce more creatinine than men, but then later on it gives statistics that seem to contradict this (even when measured proportionately to body weight, the statistics say men produce more). What’s going on here? 2600:1014:B081:E2B1:9CF0:D3EC:3C4D:BA57 (talk) 02:40, 15 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]