Oliguria - Clinical Reference & Coding Guide
Definition
oliguria is the medical term for abnormally low urine output. It is one of the earliest signs of impaired renal function and can indicate serious underlying medical conditions.
Clinical criteria:
- Adults: Urine output <400 mL per day or <0.5 mL/kg/hour (approximately 500 mL/day)
- Children: <0.5 mL/kg/hour
- Infants: <1 mL/kg/hour
Normal urine output: 800-2,000 mL per day in adults (average ~1,500 mL)
Oliguria vs Anuria
| Condition | Urine Output | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| oliguria | <400 mL/day (<0.5 mL/kg/hr) | Decreased urine production |
| Anuria | <50-100 mL/day | Complete or near-complete absence of urine |
| Normal | 800-2,000 mL/day | Normal kidney function |
| Polyuria | >2,500-3,000 mL/day | Excessive urine production |
Note: Oliguria can progress to anuria if the underlying cause is not treated.
Classification by Onset
Oliguria can be classified by how quickly it develops:[
- Acute oliguria - sudden onset (hours to days)
- Chronic oliguria - gradual development (weeks to months)
- Transient oliguria - temporary (e.g., post-operative)
Causes of Oliguria (Categorized by Mechanism)
Prerenal Causes (Decreased Blood Flow to Kidneys)
Most common mechanism - reduced renal perfusion
Hypovolemia (volume depletion):
- Dehydration - most common cause overall
- Vomiting, diarrhea, excessive sweating
- Inadequate fluid intake
- Hemorrhage/blood loss - trauma, surgery, GI bleeding
- Third-spacing - fluid shifts (burns, pancreatitis, sepsis)
- Diuretic overuse
Decreased cardiac output:
- Heart failure - heart can’t pump enough blood to kidneys
- Cardiogenic shock
- Myocardial infarction
- Arrhythmias
Decreased systemic vascular resistance:
- Septic shock - severe infection
- Anaphylactic shock - severe allergic reaction
- Vasodilatory medications
Renal artery problems:
Key feature: Prerenal oliguria is potentially reversible if normal renal perfusion is restored promptly.
Renal/Intrinsic Causes (Kidney Damage)
Direct kidney injury or disease
Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN) - most common intrinsic cause:
- Ischemic ATN - prolonged hypoperfusion (>4 hours)
- Nephrotoxic ATN - toxic injury to tubules
- Medications: Aminoglycosides (gentamicin, kanamycin), vancomycin, NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors
- IV contrast agents (radiographic dye)
- Heavy metals: Mercury, lead
- Chemotherapy: Cisplatin, methotrexate
- Myoglobin (rhabdomyolysis), hemoglobin (hemolysis)
Glomerular diseases:
- Glomerulonephritis
- vasculitis (e.g., ANCA-associated)
- Lupus nephritis
- Goodpasture syndrome
Vascular diseases:
- Malignant hypertension
- Scleroderma renal crisis
- Thrombotic microangiopathy (TTP, HUS)
- Acute interstitial nephritis (drug-induced)
- Chronic interstitial nephritis
Other kidney diseases:
- acute kidney injury (AKI)
- Chronic kidney disease (CKD) - advanced stages
- Polycystic kidney disease
Infections:
- Severe urinary tract infections (UTIs)
- Pyelonephritis (kidney infection)
Key feature: In renal causes, the kidney loses its normal ability to produce and excrete urine.
Postrenal Causes (Urinary Tract Obstruction)
Normal urine production but blocked outflow
Upper urinary tract obstruction:
- Ureteral obstruction (bilateral or solitary functioning kidney)
- Kidney stones (urolithiasis)
- Tumor compression (bladder, prostate, cervical, colorectal)
- Retroperitoneal fibrosis
- Blood clots
- Ureteral stricture
Lower urinary tract obstruction (more common):
- Bladder outlet obstruction:
- benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) (BPH) - very common in older men
- Prostate cancer
- Bladder tumor
- Neurogenic bladder
- Medications (anticholinergics, opioids)
- Urethral obstruction:
- Urethral stricture
- Urethral trauma
- Blocked urinary catheter
Key feature: Urine production is normal, but output is blocked; often reversible once obstruction is relieved.
Special Situations
Post-operative oliguria:
- Common after surgery due to:
- Vasopressin (ADH) release
- Sympathetic nervous system activation
- Anesthesia effects
- Volume depletion from NPO status
- Usually transient and resolves with fluid resuscitation
Medication-induced:
- ACE inhibitors/ARBs
- NSAIDs
- Diuretics (paradoxically, if causing severe dehydration)
- Contrast dye
Pathophysiology
Prerenal Mechanism
- Decreased renal blood flow
- Activation of neurohormonal pathways:
- Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) activated
- Catecholamines released
- Vasopressin (ADH) increased
- Body attempts to conserve fluid and sodium
- Kidneys concentrate urine and reduce output
- Reversible if perfusion restored quickly
Renal Mechanism
- Direct tubular damage occurs
- Kidney loses ability to produce urine normally
- Filtered waste products leak back into bloodstream
- Decreased glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
- May progress to acute kidney injury if severe
Postrenal Mechanism
- Urine production continues normally
- Physical blockage prevents urine from exiting
- Back-pressure on kidneys
- Can lead to hydronephrosis (kidney swelling)
- Eventually causes kidney damage if prolonged
Clinical Presentation & Symptoms
Primary Symptom
- Decreased urine output - noticeably peeing less than usual
- Dark-colored urine - concentrated
- Decreased frequency of urination
Associated Symptoms (Depend on Underlying Cause)
Fluid retention:
- Swelling (edema) - legs, ankles, feet, abdomen
- Weight gain - from fluid accumulation
- Puffiness - face, hands
- Pulmonary edema - fluid in lungs (shortness of breath)
- Ascites - abdominal fluid
- Pleural effusions - fluid around lungs
Electrolyte imbalances:
- Hyperkalemia - high potassium (dangerous heart rhythms)
- Metabolic acidosis - acid buildup
- Hyperphosphatemia - high phosphorus
- Hypocalcemia - low calcium
- Hyponatremia - low sodium (in some cases)
Neurologic symptoms:
- Confusion, disorientation
- Drowsiness, somnolence
- hyperreflexia - overactive reflexes
- Seizures (severe)
- Coma (critical)
Cardiovascular symptoms:
- hypertension - high blood pressure from fluid retention
- Hypotension - low blood pressure (if sepsis, bleeding)
- Congestive heart failure
- Arrhythmias - from electrolyte imbalances
- ECG changes - from Hyperkalemia
- Pericarditis - rare, from uremia
Gastrointestinal symptoms:
Respiratory symptoms:
- Kussmaul breathing - deep, rapid breathing (metabolic acidosis)
- Shortness of breath - from pulmonary edema
General symptoms:
- Fatigue, weakness
- Muscle weakness or paralysis - from electrolyte imbalances
- Lethargy
Diagnosis
Clinical Evaluation
History:
- Recent fluid intake and output
- Vomiting, diarrhea, excessive sweating
- Recent surgeries or procedures
- Medications (especially NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, diuretics, contrast)
- Symptoms of infection (fever, dysuria)
- Cardiac or lung disease history
- Urinary symptoms (hesitancy, straining, frequency)
Physical Examination:
- Vital signs: Blood pressure (high or low?), heart rate, temperature
- Volume status assessment:
- Skin turgor, mucous membranes (dehydration)
- Jugular venous pressure (JVP) - volume status
- Orthostatic hypotension
- edema: Peripheral, pulmonary, ascites
- Bladder: Palpable distended bladder (suggests obstruction)
- Cardiac: Heart failure signs
- Abdominal: Masses, tenderness
- Prostate exam (men): BPH, prostate enlargement
- Neurologic exam: Mental status changes
Laboratory Tests
Essential labs:
- Serum electrolytes - Na, K, Cl, CO2
- BUN (Blood Urea Nitrogen) - elevated in kidney dysfunction
- Creatinine - assess kidney function
- BUN:Creatinine ratio - helps differentiate prerenal from renal
- >20:1 suggests prerenal (dehydration)
- <15:1 suggests intrinsic renal disease
- Urine sodium concentration
- Urine creatinine
- Specific gravity - concentrated (prerenal) vs dilute
- Urine sediment - casts, cells, crystals
- Protein, blood, WBCs
Fractional Excretion of Sodium (FENa):
- Formula: FENa = (Urine Na × Serum Cr) / (Serum Na × Urine Cr) × 100
- FENa <1% → Prerenal cause (kidneys conserving sodium)
- FENa >2% → Intrinsic renal (ATN)
- FENa 1-2% → Indeterminate
Additional labs (as indicated):
- Complete Blood Count (CBC) - anemia, infection
- Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) - metabolic acidosis
- Lactate - tissue hypoxia
- Calcium, phosphate - electrolyte disturbances
- Liver function tests
- Cardiac enzymes - if heart failure suspected
Imaging Studies
Renal ultrasound:
- First-line imaging for suspected obstruction
- Assess for hydronephrosis (kidney swelling)
- Kidney size and echogenicity
- Bladder volume (post-void residual)
- Non-invasive, no contrast needed
CT scan abdomen/pelvis:
- Identify stones, masses, obstruction
- Evaluate retroperitoneum
- More detailed than ultrasound
Bladder scan:
- Measure bladder volume non-invasively
- Identify urinary retention
Voiding cystourethrogram (VCUG):
- Assess bladder and urethra anatomy
- Identify reflux
Other imaging:
- Chest X-ray - pulmonary edema, pleural effusions
- Echocardiogram - assess cardiac function if heart failure suspected
Procedures
- Diagnostic - measure post-void residual
- Therapeutic - relieve obstruction
- May reveal blocked catheter as cause
- Direct visualization of bladder and urethra
- Identify obstructions, tumors, strictures
Kidney biopsy:
- If intrinsic renal disease suspected
- Diagnose glomerulonephritis, interstitial nephritis
Treatment
Treatment depends on underlying cause
Prerenal Oliguria Treatment
Goal: Restore renal perfusion
Volume resuscitation:
- IV fluids - crystalloids (normal saline, lactated Ringer’s)
- Bolus 500-1,000 mL, then reassess
- Monitor urine output response
- Avoid over-resuscitation (risk of pulmonary edema)
Treat underlying cause:
- Stop bleeding - surgery, transfusions
- Treat heart failure - diuretics, inotropes, vasodilators
- sepsis management - antibiotics, fluids, vasopressors
- Discontinue offending medications - NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors
Hemodynamic support:
- Vasopressors if septic shock (norepinephrine, vasopressin)
- Inotropes if cardiogenic shock (dobutamine)
Renal (Intrinsic) Oliguria Treatment
Goal: Supportive care, prevent further damage
Discontinue nephrotoxic agents:
- Stop NSAIDs, aminoglycosides, contrast agents
- Adjust medication doses for renal function
Fluid and electrolyte management:
- Fluid restriction if volume overloaded
- Electrolyte correction:
- Hyperkalemia: Kayexalate, insulin/glucose, calcium gluconate, dialysis
- Metabolic acidosis: Sodium bicarbonate
- Hyperphosphatemia: Phosphate binders
Supportive care:
- Nutrition support - adequate calories, protein restriction if uremic
- Avoid further insults - maintain adequate BP, avoid dehydration
Renal replacement therapy (dialysis):
- Indications:
- Severe hyperkalemia refractory to medical management
- Severe metabolic acidosis
- Volume overload/pulmonary edema
- Uremic symptoms (pericarditis, encephalopathy)
- Severe electrolyte abnormalities
- Types: Hemodialysis, continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT), peritoneal dialysis
Postrenal Oliguria Treatment
Goal: Relieve obstruction
Lower urinary tract obstruction:
- Urinary catheter placement - Foley catheter
- If blocked catheter: flush or replace
- Suprapubic catheter - if urethral obstruction
- Treat BPH:
- Alpha-blockers (tamsulosin, alfuzosin)
- 5-alpha reductase inhibitors
- TURP (transurethral resection of prostate)
Upper urinary tract obstruction:
- Nephrostomy tube - percutaneous drainage
- Ureteral stent - bypass obstruction
- Lithotripsy - for kidney stones
- Surgery - remove tumors, repair strictures
Monitor response:
- Urine output should increase after obstruction relieved
- “Post-obstructive diuresis” may occur - massive urine output after relief
General Supportive Measures
- Monitor intake and output strictly
- Daily weights
- Serial electrolytes, BUN, creatinine
- Medication dose adjustments for renal function
- Avoid further nephrotoxins
- Treat complications:
- Pulmonary edema → diuretics, oxygen
- Infections → antibiotics
- Pericarditis → NSAIDs, dialysis
Complications
If oliguria is untreated or prolonged:
- Acute kidney injury (AKI)
- Chronic kidney disease (CKD) - if prolonged
- Hyperkalemia - life-threatening arrhythmias
- Metabolic acidosis - pH disturbances
- Volume overload - pulmonary edema, heart failure
- uremia - buildup of waste products
- Electrolyte imbalances - multiple
- Multi-organ dysfunction
- Death - if severe and untreated
ICD-10-CM Codes for Oliguria
Primary Oliguria Code
- R34 - Anuria and oliguria
- This is the code for oliguria as a symptom
- Use when oliguria is the documented finding
Note: R34 is a symptom code - always try to identify and code the underlying cause when documented.
Common Underlying Causes to Code WITH Oliguria
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI):
- N17.0 - Acute kidney failure with tubular necrosis
- N17.1 - Acute kidney failure with acute cortical necrosis
- N17.2 - Acute kidney failure with medullary necrosis
- N17.8 - Other acute kidney failure
- N17.9 - Acute kidney failure, unspecified
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD):
- N18.1 - Chronic kidney disease, stage 1
- N18.2 - Chronic kidney disease, stage 2 (mild)
- N18.3- - Chronic kidney disease, stage 3 (moderate)
- N18.4 - Chronic kidney disease, stage 4 (severe)
- N18.5 - Chronic kidney disease, stage 5 (ESRD)
- N18.6 - End stage renal disease (on dialysis)
- N18.9 - Chronic kidney disease, unspecified
Dehydration/Volume Depletion:
Heart Failure:
- I50.9 - Heart failure, unspecified
- I50.21 - Acute systolic heart failure
- I50.31 - Acute diastolic heart failure
- I50.41 - Acute combined systolic and diastolic heart failure
Urinary Obstruction:
- N13.0 - Hydronephrosis with ureteropelvic junction obstruction
- N13.1 - Hydronephrosis with ureteral stricture
- N13.30 - Unspecified hydronephrosis
- N13.39 - Other hydronephrosis
- N40.1 - Benign prostatic hyperplasia with lower urinary tract symptoms
- R33.9 - Retention of urine, unspecified
- R33.8 - Other retention of urine
Sepsis:
- A41.9 - Sepsis, unspecified organism
- A41.51 - Sepsis due to Escherichia coli
- R65.21 - Severe sepsis with septic shock
Shock:
Electrolyte Imbalances (Complications):
Post-operative:
- T81.40xA - Unspecified complication of procedure, initial encounter
Common CPT Codes with Oliguria
E/M Services
- 99221-99223 - Initial hospital care
- [[99231-99233 - Subsequent hospital care
- [[99291-99292 - Critical care (if severe)
- [[99281-99285 - Emergency department services
Diagnostic Procedures
Laboratory:
- 80047, 80048, 80050, 80053 - Metabolic panels (electrolytes, BUN, Cr)
- 82565 - Creatinine, blood
- 84520 - Urea nitrogen (BUN)
- 82310 - Calcium, total
- 84132 - Potassium
- 84295 - Sodium
- 81000-81003 - Urinalysis
- 82570 - Creatinine, urine
- 84300 - Sodium, urine
Imaging:
- 76700 - Ultrasound, abdominal, complete
- 76770 - Ultrasound, retroperitoneal (kidneys), complete
- 76775 - Ultrasound, retroperitoneal, limited (bladder scan)
- 74150-74170 - CT abdomen without/with contrast
- 74176-74178 - CT abdomen and pelvis
- 71045-71048 - Chest X-ray (if pulmonary edema)
Therapeutic Procedures
Urinary Catheterization:
- 51701 - Insertion of non-indwelling bladder catheter (straight cath)
- 51702 - Insertion of temporary indwelling bladder catheter, simple
- 51703 - Insertion of temporary indwelling bladder catheter, complicated
- 51798 - Measurement of post-void residual urine by ultrasound
Dialysis:
- 90935 - Hemodialysis procedure with single evaluation
- 90937 - Hemodialysis procedure requiring repeated evaluation(s)
- 90945 - Dialysis procedure other than hemodialysis (peritoneal)
- 90947 - Dialysis procedure other than hemodialysis requiring repeated evaluations
Procedures for Obstruction:
- 52332 - Cystourethroscopy with insertion of ureteral stent
- 52450 - Transurethral incision of prostate
- 50080 - Percutaneous nephrostolithotomy or pyelostolithotomy
Clinical & Coding Pearls
Clinical Pearls
✅ Early sign of kidney problems - oliguria often appears before other symptoms of kidney failure
✅ Monitor strict I&O - intake and output measurement is essential for diagnosis and management
✅ Calculate urine output rate:
- mL/kg/hour is more accurate than daily totals
- Example: 70 kg patient should make ~35 mL/hour (0.5 mL/kg/hr)
✅ FENa is key diagnostic tool - helps differentiate prerenal (<1%) from intrinsic renal (>2%)
✅ Prerenal is most common - dehydration accounts for majority of oliguria cases
✅ Reversibility depends on cause:
- Prerenal: Usually reversible with fluids
- Renal: May be reversible if caught early
- Postrenal: Reversible if obstruction relieved promptly
✅ Post-obstructive diuresis - after relieving obstruction, massive urine output may occur; requires careful fluid replacement
✅ Medication review critical - many drugs cause or worsen oliguria (NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, aminoglycosides, contrast
✅ Don’t forget the catheter - in hospitalized patients, check for blocked Foley catheter first!
✅ Post-op oliguria is common - usually transient from vasopressin release and sympathetic activation
Coding Pearls
✅ R34 is a symptom code - always try to identify underlying cause
✅ Code underlying condition first:
- If AKI documented: Code N17.x as principal
- If dehydration: Code E86.0 as principal
- R34 can be secondary diagnosis
✅ Query if unclear:
- “Oliguria” alone → Query for cause
- “Low urine output” → Clarify if true oliguria vs normal variation
- “Decreased UOP post-op” → Clarify if pathologic or expected
✅ Don’t assume AKI - oliguria doesn’t always mean acute kidney injury; could be prerenal or postrenal
✅ Document measurements:
- Actual urine volumes
- Timing (24-hour total, hourly rate)
- Helps support severity/diagnosis
✅ Electrolyte complications - code all documented (hyperkalemia, acidosis, etc.) as they affect severity/DRG
✅ Post-void residual - if measured, document findings (normal <50 mL, abnormal >200 mL)
Related Obsidian Notes
- Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)
- Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
- Anuria
- Urinary Retention
- Hydronephrosis
- Dehydration
- Hyperkalemia
- Metabolic Acidosis
- Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN)
- benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)
- Fractional Excretion of Sodium (FENa)
- dialysis
- Post-Obstructive Diuresis
Last Updated: February 10, 2026
References: Cleveland Clinic, StatPearls/NCBI, WebMD, Osmosis, Merck Manual, Apollo Hospitals
Key Concept: Oliguria = abnormally low urine output (<400 mL/day or <0.5 mL/kg/hr in adults). It’s an early sign of kidney problems with three main causes: prerenal (decreased blood flow - most common, often dehydration), renal (kidney damage - ATN, glomerulonephritis), or postrenal (obstruction - BPH, stones). Diagnosis requires calculating FENa (<1% = prerenal, >2% = intrinsic renal) and imaging to rule out obstruction. Treatment targets the underlying cause: fluids for prerenal, supportive care ± dialysis for renal, and relief of obstruction for postrenal. Code R34 for oliguria symptom, but always identify and code the underlying cause (N17.x for AKI, E86.0 for dehydration, N40.1 for BPH, etc.).
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