| Literature DB >> 24455707 |
Demosthenes D Cokkinos1, Eleni G Antypa1, Maria Skilakaki1, Despoina Kriketou1, Ekaterini Tavernaraki1, Ploutarchos N Piperopoulos1.
Abstract
One of the many imaging uses of contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) is studying a wide variety of kidney pathology, due to its ability to detect microvascular blood flow in real time without affecting renal function. CEUS enables dynamic assessment and quantification of microvascularisation up to capillary perfusion. The objective of this paper is to briefly refresh basic knowledge of ultrasound (US) contrast agents' physical properties, to study technical details of CEUS scanning in the kidneys, and to review the commonest renal indications for CEUS, with imaging examples in comparison to baseline unenhanced US and computed tomography when performed. Safety matters and limitations of CEUS of the kidneys are also discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24455707 PMCID: PMC3884609 DOI: 10.1155/2013/595873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Renal cell carcinoma: a large mixed echogenicity lesion is seen in the middle of the left kidney on B-mode US (a). Colour Doppler (b) reveals some peripheral blood flow. On CEUS (c) there is uptake inside the lesion, but altogether different enhancement than the rest of the kidney. Contrast enhanced CT (d) confirms the mass. Histology after surgery diagnosed a renal cell carcinoma.
Figure 2Kidney pseudotumour: a solid isoechoic area is noted in the middle of the left kidney on B-mode US (arrows in (a)), seeming to displace blood vessels on Colour Doppler (arrows in (b)). After SonoVue injection (c), this area enhances in the same way as the rest of the renal parenchyma, suggestive of a pseudotumour of no clinical significance.
Figure 3Transitional cell carcinoma: echogenic content is located in the upper part of the dilated pelvicalyceal system. It does not show blood flow on Colour Doppler US (arrow in (a)). However, it enhances on CEUS (arrow in (b)), due to its neoplastic nature.
Figure 4Haemorrhagic cyst: a cystic structure with some echogenic content is seen in the right kidney on B-mode US (arrow in (a)). On CEUS (b) this content shows no enhancement. This finding is not suggestive of a solid lesion but consistent with a haemorrhagic cyst.
Figure 5Bosniak I and II cysts: two cysts are noted on B-mode US (a). Cyst 1 shows no septa and is classified as Bosniak I. Cyst II shows a thin septum with only minimal enhancement on CEUS (b) and is classified as Bosniak II.
Figure 6Bosniak II cyst: an anechoic cyst is seen on B-mode US (a). Some peripheral septa are present. After contrast injection (b), the septa do not show any enhancement. This classifies the cyst as Bosniak II.
Figure 7Bosniak III cyst: a mixed echogenicity cortical lesion is noted in the right kidney on B-mode US (a). Colour Doppler (b) does not reveal increased vascularity inside the lesion. However, CEUS (c) shows rich enhancement in the cyst's septa. This finding classifies the lesion as a Bosniak III renal cyst.
Figure 8Bosniak IIF cyst: two cysts are present in the left kidney on B-mode US (a). The larger cyst shows small marginal septa (arrows). On CEUS the septa show definitive enhancement (arrow in (b)). This classifies the cyst as IIF. This enhancement is not evident on contrast enhanced CT (c).
Figure 9Kidney infarct: B-mode (a) and Colour Doppler (b) US detect no abnormality in the left kidney. On CEUS however (c) a triangular peripheral enhancement defect is evident (arrow).
Figure 10Renal abscess: B-mode (a) and Colour Doppler (b) US detect a round mixed echogenicity lesion in the upper part of the left kidney. After contrast injection, early enhancement is seen in the periphery of the lesion (c) with no internal uptake ((c), (d)).
Figure 11Pyelonephritis: B-mode US images an enlarged right kidney (a) with a dilated pelvicalyceal system, containing echogenic material. A small perinephric collection is also seen (arrow in (b)). CT (c) confirms these findings. On CEUS (d) the echogenic material in the collecting system (arrows) does not enhance, suggestive of a purulent, non neoplastic nature. Note the difference from transitional cell carcinoma enhancement (Figure 3).
Figure 12Renal trauma: B-mode US detects areas of different echogenicities in the lower moiety of the kidney (arrows in (a)). After contrast injection (b), a filling defect is seen due to kidney laceration (arrow).
An overview of the pathological entities addressed in the paper with corresponding imaging details on baseline US and CEUS, as well as the references.
| Pathological entities | Baseline US findings | CEUS findings | References |
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| Differential diagnosis between solid renal masses and pseudotumours | Normal variants cannot always be differentiated from tumours | Tumour vascularity is different from normal parenchyma, at least in one vascular phase | [ |
| Pseudotumours enhance parallel to the kidney parenchyma in all phases ( | [ | ||
| Solid tumours cannot be characterised as benign or malignant | Solid tumours do not show specific perfusion patterns to differentiate between benign and malignant lesions | [ | |
| Colour Doppler has limitations in imaging neoplastic invasion of the renal vein and collecting system | Malignant renal vein thrombus enhances, while bland thrombus does not show contrast uptake. Enhancing material in the collecting system is characterised as neoplastic tissue contrary to nonenhancing infectious material ( | [ | |
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| Differentiation between cystic and solid lesions | Colour Doppler has limitations in imaging perfusion in echogenic content of cysts | Solid hypovascular tumours enhance, even minimally, while debris does not ( | [ |
| CEUS is superior to CT and MR for diagnosing cystic renal cell carcinoma | [ | ||
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| Characterisation of complex cystic renal masses | Colour Doppler has limitations in imaging perfusion in septa and nodules of cysts | CEUS shows enhancement in solid septa and nodules, with equal or superior diagnostic accuracy compared to CT for cyst classification using the Bosniak system (Figures | [ |
| CEUS is an alternative to CT for complex cysts followup | [ | ||
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| Renal ischaemia | Colour Doppler has limitations in imaging perfusion in small blood vessels with slow flow | CEUS is comparable to CECT for detecting parenchymal ischaemia. Infarcts appear as triangular or wedge-shaped areas with no contrast uptake ( | [ |
| CEUS differentiates infarcts from parenchymal areas with diminished perfusion | [ | ||
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| Renal infections | B-mode US is needed to rule out the presence of calculi and urinary tract obstruction | Focal pyelonephritis shows areas of reduced enhancement. An abscess appears as a non-enhancing area with peripheral uptake ( | [ |
| Puss in the collecting system or bladder shows no uptake ( | [ | ||
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| Renal trauma | Baseline US is adequate for fluid detection but has low sensitivity for imaging traumatic lesions, which may be isoechoic and can be missed | CEUS reveals injuries not visible on baseline US as nonenhancing areas ( | [ |
| Patients initially imaged with CT can be followed with CEUS | [ | ||
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| Renal artery stenosis | Doppler examination of renal arteries is the first imaging examination to be performed for assessing stenosis | Routine use of CEUS offers no significant advantage for renal artery stenosis evaluation | [ |
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| Percutaneous ablation therapy assessment | Baseline US does not offer significant information | CEUS confirms treatment results, imaging remaining tumour vascularity. Areas still enhancing afterablation are considered as residual tumour | [ |