| Literature DB >> 19255628 |
Krishnan Venkatesan1, Joel Green, Steven R Shapiro, George F Steinhardt.
Abstract
Purpose. We seek to correlate conventional hydronephrosis (HN) grade and hydronephrosis index (HI). Methods. We examined 1207 hydronephrotic kidneys by ultrasound. HN was classified by Society of Fetal Urology guidelines. HN was then gauged using HI, a reproducible, standardized, and dimensionless measurement of renal area. We then calculated average HI for each HN grade. Results. Comparing HI to standard SFU HN grade, average HI is 89.3 for grade I; average HI is 83.9 for grade II; average HI is 73.0 for grade III; average HI is 54.6 for SFU grade IV. Conclusions. HI correlates well with SFU HN grade. The HI serves as a quantitative measure of HN. HI can be used to track HN over time. Versus conventional grading, HI may be more sensitive in defining severe (grades III and IV) HN, and in indicating resolving, stable, or worsening HN, thus providing more information for clinical decision-making and HN management.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19255628 PMCID: PMC2648052 DOI: 10.1155/2009/960490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Urol ISSN: 1687-6369
Figure 1Boundaries of hydronephrotic kidney marked.
Correlation of HI to HN grade.
| SFU grade | Mean HI | Range of HI | HI std dev | Number of kidneys |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | 89.3 | 42–97 | 5.9 | 202 |
| II | 83.9 | 39–100 | 7.2 | 444 |
| III | 73.0 | 43–97 | 8.6 | 298 |
| IV | 54.6 | 20–94 | 12.5 | 263 |
Figure 2SFU grade IV hydronephrosis; Calculated HI 58.5. The dotted line outlines the renal pelvis [black] as used in calculating HI.
Figure 3Same kidney 1.5 months later. SFU grade IV hydronephrosis; Calculated HI 27. The dotted line outlines the entire renal area, including renal pelvis [black] and parenchyma (dark gray). While the SFU grade remained the same, the HI has deteriorated significantly, indicating an actual worsening HN.