| Literature DB >> 26058500 |
David Schnell1, Michael Darmon.
Abstract
Three Doppler-derived techniques have been proposed to assess renal perfusion at bedside: Doppler-based renal resistive index (RI) which has been extensively but imperfectly studied in assessing renal allograft status and changes in renal perfusion in critically ill patients and for predicting the reversibility of an acute kidney injury (AKI), semi-quantitative evaluation of renal perfusion using colour-Doppler which may be easier to perform and may give similar information than RI and contrast-enhanced sonography that may allow more precise renal and cortical perfusion assessment. These promising tools have several obvious advantages including their feasibility, non-invasiveness, repeatability and potential interest in assessing renal function or perfusion. However, several limits need to be taken into account with these techniques, and promising results remain associated with large areas of uncertainty. This editorial will describe more carefully advantages and limits of these techniques and will discuss their potential interest in assessing renal perfusion.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26058500 PMCID: PMC4461647 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-015-0024-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Ultrasound J ISSN: 2036-3176
Colour-Doppler for a semi-quantitative evaluation of intra-renal vascularization [4]
| Stage | Quality of renal perfusion by colour-Doppler |
|---|---|
| 0 | Unidentifiable vessels |
| 1 | Few vessels in the vicinity of the hilum |
| 2 | Hilar and interlobar vessels in most of the renal parenchyma |
| 3 | Renal vessels identifiable until the arcuate arteries in the entire field of view |
Bedside Doppler Ultrasound for the assessment of renal perfusion in the ICU: advantages and limitations of the available techniques. David SCHNELL et al.
Fig. 1Boxplot of Doppler sonography renal resistive index (RI) values according to semi-quantitative colour-Doppler grade (Reproduced from Schnell et al. Minerva Anesthesiologica 2014 [15])