Doctor's Assessment Included
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Creatinine levels: what do they tell you about your kidney function?
Creatinine monitoring is essential for healthy ageing, as kidney function naturally declines with age. Older adults may also be more susceptible to medication-related kidney effects, making regular creatinine testing an important part of age-appropriate health screening.
Reference Ranges
Reference ranges may vary between laboratories. When you order a test, a BIG-registered doctor assesses your personal results in context. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
What It Measures
Kidney function is not assessed on creatinine alone. Together with your age, sex, and ethnicity, creatinine is converted to the eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate), which gives a more accurate picture of how much blood your kidneys filter per minute.
A single creatinine measurement is a snapshot. With a borderline value, your doctor may decide to repeat the test after a few weeks, as temporary factors such as dehydration or intense exercise can influence the value.
Why It Matters
In diabetes and high blood pressure — the two leading causes of chronic kidney damage — periodic creatinine monitoring is part of clinical guidelines. Kidney function monitoring is also recommended during long-term use of NSAIDs (painkillers such as ibuprofen and diclofenac), ACE inhibitors, or certain antibiotics.
An elevated creatinine does not always indicate kidney damage. In people with high muscle mass (strength athletes) or high protein intake, the value can naturally be higher. Conversely, low creatinine in the elderly or in people with little muscle mass can mask reduced kidney function — eGFR is more reliable in those cases.
When to Test
For symptoms such as unexplained swollen ankles, foamy urine, persistent fatigue, or reduced urine output, creatinine can help rule out or confirm kidney problems.
If you are over 50, periodic kidney function monitoring is sensible, especially combined with blood pressure and blood sugar checks. Fasting is not required, but avoid a heavy protein-rich meal or intense strength training just before the blood draw.
Symptoms
Low Levels
High Levels
With an acutely significantly elevated creatinine — for example from dehydration, urinary obstruction, or a toxic substance — symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, confusion, and severely reduced urine output may occur. This requires immediate medical attention.
Recommendations
Male
Low creatinine may indicate reduced muscle mass. Consider evaluation if unexpected.
Elevated creatinine may indicate kidney dysfunction. Consult your healthcare provider for kidney function evaluation.
Female
Low creatinine may indicate reduced muscle mass. Consider evaluation if unexpected.
Elevated creatinine may indicate kidney dysfunction. Consult your healthcare provider for kidney function evaluation.
Lifestyle Tips
Limit the use of NSAIDs (ibuprofen, diclofenac, naproxen) as chronic use can cause kidney damage. Paracetamol at normal doses is safer for the kidneys.
A diet with moderate protein intake supports kidney function. Extremely high protein consumption (above 2 grams per kilogram of body weight) can raise creatinine and burden the kidneys over time, especially in people with already reduced kidney function.
Keep your blood pressure and blood sugar under control — these are the two biggest risk factors for chronic kidney damage.