Review Article

Urine Bag as a Modern Day Matula

Figure 2

(a) Green urine—Pseudomonas-related urinary tract infection. (b) Milky white urine—in Pseudomonas urinary tract infection with chronic kidney disease. (c) Black urine—in Paraphenylenediamine dye intoxication. (d) Red urine—in scrub typhus-related disseminated intravascular coagulation. (e) Orange-brown urine—in a patient with obstructive jaundice and being administered multivitamins. (f) Orange urine—diabetes, urinary tract infection receiving pyridium.
215690.fig.002a
(a)
215690.fig.002b
(b)
215690.fig.002c
(c)
215690.fig.002d
(d)
215690.fig.002e
(e)
215690.fig.002f
(f)