| Literature DB >> 27177584 |
Honghan Gong1, Lei Gao2, Xi-Jian Dai2, Fuqing Zhou2, Ning Zhang2, Xianjun Zeng2, Jian Jiang2, Laichang He2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Duplex kidney is a common anomaly that is frequently associated with multiple complications. Typical computed tomography urography (CTU) includes four phases (unenhanced, arterial, parenchymal and excretory) and has been suggested to considerably aid in the duplex kidney diagnosi. Unfortunately, regarding duplex kidney with prolonged dilatation, the affected parenchyma and tortuous ureters demonstrate a lack of or delayed excretory opacification. We used prolonged-delay CTU, which consists of another prolonged-delay phase (1- to 72-h delay; mean delay: 24 h) to opacify the duplicated ureters and affected parenchyma.Entities:
Keywords: Duplex kidney; Duplicated ureters; Multi-slice spiral CT urography; Prolonged-delay contrast enhancement
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27177584 PMCID: PMC4868012 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-016-0139-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Demographic characteristics of 17 patients with duplex kidney
| Patient demographics | |
|---|---|
| Age | 2.5 ~ 56y, mean 40.4y |
| Sex | 9 male/8 female |
| Category | 13 unilateral/4 bilateral |
| Irregular small kidney/Megaureter malformation | 7 |
| Renal pelvis/Ureter malformations | 5 |
| Bladder-ureter malformation | 5 |
Fig. 1Case 1. A 56-year-old male patient with right side duplex kidney. Unenhanced supine axial CT (a) shows a solitary round, iso-dense, soft-tissue mass with a clear boundary (short arrow). The irregularly annular calcified shadow around the mass was equivalent to multiple annular low-density shadows in the ileocecal junction (long arrow). The mass was not clearly intensified after contrast enhancement (b) and one-hour delayed (c) CTU scanning. Interestingly, it was obviously strengthened after 18-h delay (d), confirming duplex kidney. Furthermore, we found a band of high-density shadows that was confirmed to be duplicated ureters (double-headed arrow). Reformatted 3D CTU after segmentation of bone structures also showed the entire course of the dilated ureters (e)
Fig. 5Case 5. CT scans obtained in a 20-year-old man with left congenital megaloureter. Nonenhanced scan obtained at the abdomen & pelvis shows huge fluid-filled loops (red arrow), and the normal bowel loops are compressed to the right side of the abdominal wall (a). The left renal pelvis and calyces show marked dilation, with parenchyma thinning (red arrow) on parenchymal phase enhancement (b), for unknown reason the images of prolonged phase were missing