๐ŸŽ—๏ธ Aligned with: National Kidney Month ยท March

Blood in Your Urine and Sickle Cell Trait: Don't Delay

Sometimes blood in the urine is harmless. Sometimes it isn't. With sickle cell trait, you don't get to guess.

If you ever look down and notice your urine is pink, bright red, or brown โ€” pause. That's hematuria: blood in the urine. Sometimes it's so subtle you can only see it under a microscope; sometimes it's obvious. Either way, if you have sickle cell trait (SCT), it's worth a same-week appointment, not a wait-and-see.

Why the urgency? Most causes of hematuria are not serious โ€” bladder infection, kidney stones, intense exercise, a recent injury. But blood in the urine can also be the first sign of something that is serious, including a rare but aggressive kidney cancer called renal medullary carcinoma, which is more common in people who carry sickle hemoglobin.

The point isn't to scare you. The point is: blood in the urine is a signal, and it deserves a real workup, not a shrug.

What might be happening:

  • Dehydration or intense exercise โ€” both can cause hematuria, especially in someone with SCT. The kidneys' inner workings (the medulla) operate in a low-oxygen environment that the sickle cell gene doesn't love.
  • Urinary tract infection โ€” usually with burning, frequency, urgency.
  • Kidney stones โ€” usually with severe flank pain.
  • Trauma โ€” a fall, a hit, a hard tackle.
  • Renal medullary carcinoma โ€” rare but real.

What to expect at the appointment: Your provider will ask about your history (exercise, hydration, infections, family history of kidney problems). They'll do:

  • A urinalysis with microscopy (confirms the bleeding, looks for infection or cell casts).
  • Imaging โ€” typically a CT scan or MRI.
  • Possibly a referral to a nephrologist (kidney specialist) or urologist (urinary tract specialist).

Don't accept "it's just your sickle cell trait" without a workup. Your provider should be able to explain why they ruled out other causes before landing on SCT as the explanation.

While you're waiting for the appointment:

  • Drink water. A lot of it.
  • Rest. Skip strenuous workouts until you're seen.
  • Track it. Note the color, when it started, what you were doing.
  • If pain, fever, or significant bleeding develops โ€” go to the ER.

You don't get points for toughing this one out. Make the call.

โ€” Dr. Rob

๐Ÿ“„ Resource: CDC Blood in Your Urine? Don't Delay, See Your Healthcare Provider Today!

๐Ÿ‘ฅ Living with SCD ๐Ÿ‘ฅ General Public ๐ŸŽฏ Adult ๐ŸŽฏ Senior
Key terms in this post:
Hematuria Microscopic Hematuria Renal Medullary Carcinoma Nephrologist Urologist
๐Ÿ“„ CDC Source: Download FS_Hematuria_LAY.pdf for the federal fact sheet that informed this post.