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Urea / BUN Unit Converter
Medical Calculator

Urea & BUN Converter

Urea is the principal waste product of protein metabolism, synthesized in the liver via the urea cycle and excreted by the kidneys. It is a key marker for kidney function and hydration status.

There is a significant difference in reporting units globally. In the United States, laboratories report the mass of the nitrogen content only, known as Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN). In most other countries (SI units), the measurement reflects the Whole Urea Molecule. This converter standardizes these results.

BUN (Nitrogen)

US Standard

Blood Urea Nitrogen. Mass of Nitrogen only.

Urea (Molecule)

Measurement of the whole Urea molecule (SI).

Clinical Context

[Image of urea cycle]

Reference Ranges:
BUN (US): 7 – 20 mg/dL.
Urea (SI): 2.5 – 7.1 mmol/L.

Conversion Logic:
Molecular Weight of Urea (CO(NH2)2) = 60.06 g/mol.
Atomic Weight of Nitrogen (N2) = 28.014 g/mol.
1 mg/dL BUN ≈ 0.357 mmol/L Urea.
1 mmol/L Urea ≈ 2.8 mg/dL BUN.

Clinical References

How to Use This Converter

Follow these steps to normalize Urea/BUN values.

1

Identify the Unit

Check if your lab report says BUN (mg/dL) or Urea (mmol/L).

2

Enter Values

Input the numeric value into the corresponding field.

3

Automatic Calculation

The tool calculates the equivalent. Use the factor 2.8 for mental math (1 mmol/L Urea = 2.8 mg/dL BUN).

? Frequently Asked Questions
Is BUN the same as Urea?

Chemically no, but clinically they measure the same waste product. BUN measures just the nitrogen part, while Urea measures the whole molecule. The ratio is roughly 1:2.14 by weight.

What causes high BUN?

High BUN (Azotemia) can be caused by kidney dysfunction, dehydration, high protein diet, or GI bleeding.

Disclaimer: This converter is for educational and reference purposes only. It is not intended for clinical diagnosis, treatment, or decision-making. Always verify results with your laboratory’s official reports and reference ranges.