AO Scan Global summarizes key educational insights from the weekly Solex call, allowing users worldwide to learn, even if they can’t watch live. This week, AO Scan practitioner Deb Bruce focuses on the urinary system and kidney-related items within the Vital Scan, exploring how to draw remarkable insights. (AO Scan is an educational technology; it does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Always consult your trusted clinician.)
Watch the weekly call replay with Deb Bruce
Kidney-related items you’ll see in the AO Scan Vital Scan
In AO Scan, values display on a 1–9 scale, where 5 ≈ represents homeostasis. An energeticvalue may appear to be in-range or out-of-range and should be used as a learning prompt. Searching for patterns and aligning values with current symptoms helps our users quickly discover the root cause of the root cause of disease and dysfunction. The definitions below reflect the wording of Solex AO Scan software (lightly edited for clarity). Where noted, I’ve paraphrased from reputable public sources so you have something citable.
*Note: You will note that all values in the Vital Scan have definitions so users can educate themselves in their scanning journey. Below is a small part related to the urinary system. For a complete view of all of our scans, book a FREE DEMO today.
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Creatinine, Serum (mg/dL) – A waste product of muscle metabolism, filtered by the kidneys and excreted in urine. Higher blood creatinine can reflect reduced filtration. (Paraphrased; background: MedlinePlus).
Link: https://medlineplus.gov/lab-tests/creatinine-test/ -
Cystatin C = A biomarker of kidney function. Higher levels generally indicate reduced filtration and may be useful when creatinine is unreliable (e.g., unusual muscle mass).
Links: PubMed overview https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32450046/ • Review https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36514729/ -
Uric Acid – Blood test helps detect hyperuricemia (gout risk) and is sometimes monitored during chemotherapy/radiation (tumor lysis can raise levels). A urine uric acid test may help evaluate recurrent kidney stones.
Link: https://medlineplus.gov/lab-tests/uric-acid-test/ -
Proteinuria (albumin/protein in urine) – Protein in urine can be a sign of kidney damage; healthy filters keep albumin in the blood. Risk factors include diabetes and high blood pressure.
Links: NIDDK https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/kidney-disease/chronic-kidney-disease-ckd/tests-diagnosis/albuminuria-albumin-urine • NKF https://www.kidney.org/kidney-topics/albuminuria-proteinuria -
Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN) – Urea forms as the liver breaks down protein; the kidneys normally remove it. High BUN can accompany reduced kidney function or dehydration; low BUN may reflect other issues. (Paraphrased; background: MedlinePlus.)
Link: https://medlineplus.gov/lab-tests/bun-blood-urea-nitrogen/ -
Urobilinogen (urine) – Colorless by-product of bilirubin reduction formed in the intestine; a portion is reabsorbed and excreted by the kidneys. High levels can appear with hemolysis or liver disease; low/absent with bile duct obstruction.
Background: MedlinePlus urinalysis/bilirubin pages https://medlineplus.gov/urinalysis.html • https://medlineplus.gov/lab-tests/bilirubin-in-urine/
Why albumin/protein gets extra attention: Guidelines emphasize assessing urine albumin alongside filtration (eGFR), because albumin in urine is meaningful—even when eGFR seems “normal.”
Links: KDIGO 2024 CKD Guideline (PDF) https://kdigo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/KDIGO-2024-CKD-Guideline.pdf • NIDDK (clinician page) https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/professionals/clinical-tools-patient-management/kidney-disease/identify-manage-patients/evaluate-ckd/assess-urine-albumin
How to use this (educationally) with AO Scan
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Track, don’t guess. Run Inner-Voice + Vital Scan consistently for 2–3 weeks and note hydration, sleep, stress, and routine changes. Trends beat single datapoints.
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Context matters. Creatinine/BUN can shift with hydration and diet; cystatin C is often steadier when muscle mass complicates interpretation. If patterns concern you, involve your licensed clinician.
Helpful overviews: Creatinine https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/003475.htm • BUN https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/003474.htm -
When to escalate: Persistent albumin/protein in urine warrants professional follow-up.
Quick reads: NIDDK https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/kidney-disease/chronic-kidney-disease-ckd/tests-diagnosis/albuminuria-albumin-urine • NKF PDF https://www.kidney.org/sites/default/files/kidney_disease_and_albuminuria-proteinuria.pdf
Reminder: AO Scan offers an energetic lens for education. For diagnosis or treatment, partner with your healthcare professional.
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Author Box & Boilerplate
About Paige Maurer Wheeler — AO Scan Global Team Leader, Independent Quantum Living Advocate (QLA), bioenergetic educator, purveyor of goodness, mom, and lifelong biohacker. Paige has helped thousands learn to view the body through an energetic lens using AO Scan technology. Opinions are her own as an independent advocate.
AO Scan Global: The Leader in Frequency Wellness Technology
AO Scan Global is scaling education and access to Solex AO Scan technology—tools that enable you to view your body through an energetic lens. By recognizing patterns early and optimizing with targeted frequencies, people move toward balance and better choices. With a fast-growing global network and support in 20+ languages, we serve wellness practitioners, biohackers, and families worldwide. Learn more: https://www.aoscanglobal.com • Shop: https://shop.solexnation.com/energy1 • Free demo: https://www.aoscanglobal.com/contact