The CT nephrogram: implications for evaluation of urinary tract disease

The urographic nephrogram is an important indicator of underlying functional and structural renal disease. With expansions in use of cross-sectional imaging, the computed tomographic (CT) nephrogram (ie, contrast material enhancement within the renal parenchyma) has assumed a greater role in the eva...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiographics 1995-09, Vol.15 (5), p.1069-1085
Hauptverfasser: Saunders, H S, Dyer, R B, Shifrin, R Y, Scharling, E S, Bechtold, R E, Zagoria, R J
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container_end_page 1085
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1069
container_title Radiographics
container_volume 15
creator Saunders, H S
Dyer, R B
Shifrin, R Y
Scharling, E S
Bechtold, R E
Zagoria, R J
description The urographic nephrogram is an important indicator of underlying functional and structural renal disease. With expansions in use of cross-sectional imaging, the computed tomographic (CT) nephrogram (ie, contrast material enhancement within the renal parenchyma) has assumed a greater role in the evaluation of urinary tract disorders. Both quantitative and qualitative nephrographic abnormalities are well demonstrated by CT, including global or segmental absence or persistence of the nephrogram, slowed temporal progression, striated pattern, and rim pattern. Global absence is nearly always unilateral and is most often seen with blunt abdominal trauma with renal pedicle injury. Segmental absence is attributable to focal renal infarction, most likely due to arterial emboli. Global persistence, which is much more common than segmental persistence, may be unilateral (caused by renal artery stenosis, renal vein thrombosis, or urinary tract obstruction) or bilateral (due to systemic hypotension, intratubular obstruction, or abnormalities in tubular function). Striated nephrograms may be unilateral or bilateral and are caused by ureteric obstruction, acute pyelonephritis, contusion, renal vein thrombosis, tubular obstruction, hypotension, and autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease. The rim pattern is most often associated with renal infarction and occasionally with acute tubular necrosis and renal vein thrombosis. Careful evaluation of the CT nephrogram is an integral part of the abdominal CT examination.
doi_str_mv 10.1148/radiographics.15.5.7501851
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subjects Contrast Media
Humans
Kidney - diagnostic imaging
Kidney - pathology
Kidney Diseases - diagnostic imaging
Kidney Diseases - pathology
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
title The CT nephrogram: implications for evaluation of urinary tract disease
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