Literature DB >> 20833851

Renal pyramids: focused sonography of normal and pathologic processes.

Alan Daneman1, Oscar M Navarro, Gino R Somers, Arun Mohanta, José R Jarrín, Jeffrey Traubici.   

Abstract

In neonates and children, sonographic examinations of the renal pyramids may depict a spectrum of unique changes in echogenicity due to the effects of physiologic processes or a wide variety of pathologic processes that may affect the collecting ducts or interstitium of the pyramids. Focused sonographic evaluation of the pyramids with high-frequency transducers produces the most detailed images of the pyramids, revealing some appearances not previously reported, to the authors' knowledge. The authors highlight the clinical settings in which they have documented detailed changes in the echogenicity of the pyramids. The patterns of altered echogenicity alone may reflect a specific cause but in many instances are nonspecific, with clinical and biochemical correlation required to establish a more precise diagnosis. However, there is a lack of histologic data to completely explain the mechanism of many of these changes in echogenicity in all of the processes. As the authors have expanded their use of the focused sonographic technique, they have been able to depict altered echogenicity in the pyramids in greater numbers of children in whom an explanation for the changes is not always immediately apparent; for now, the cause must be considered idiopathic. More work is required to expand the use of this focused technique together with clinical, biochemical, and histologic correlation in an attempt to offer more complete explanations for the changes in echogenicity of the pyramids.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20833851     DOI: 10.1148/rg.305095222

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiographics        ISSN: 0271-5333            Impact factor:   5.333


  9 in total

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  9 in total

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