Volume expanded diuretic renography in the postnatal assessment of suspected uretero-pelvic junction obstruction
- PMID: 1460498
Volume expanded diuretic renography in the postnatal assessment of suspected uretero-pelvic junction obstruction
Abstract
Controversy surrounds the role of 99mTc-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid renography in suspected uretero-pelvic junction obstruction in early life. Accordingly, we retrospectively reviewed 18 patients (28 hydronephrotic kidneys) with a mean age of 2 mo (range: 1 wk-6 mo) who underwent a total of 36 scans using intravenous volume expansion (10 ml/kg) and furosemide diuresis (1 mg/kg). Initial scans were classified as obstructed, not obstructed or indeterminate using differential renal function, furosemide washout T 1/2 and visual assessment of tracer clearance. Those initially classified as obstructed (n = 8) have been surgically confirmed. In the indeterminate (n = 6) and nonobstructed (n = 14) groups, three and two kidneys, respectively, developed obstruction on progress scans. Mean follow-up in the nonsurgical patients was approximately 9 mo (range: 4-17 mo). A total of 13 kidneys had developed obstruction by renographic criteria, and to date 12 have surgical confirmation. Our data indicate that: (1) scans classified as obstructed correlate well with surgery; (2) an initial classification of indeterminate or nonobstructed does not exclude later development of obstruction; and (3) serial scans correctly stratify children with possible uretero-pelvic junction obstruction.
Comment in
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Tracking the natural history of infantile hydronephrosis with diuretic renography.J Nucl Med. 1992 Dec;33(12):2098-102. J Nucl Med. 1992. PMID: 1460499 No abstract available.
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