| Literature DB >> 28693502 |
Paraish Misra1, Anish Kirpalani2,3, General Leung2,3, Paraskevi A Vlachou2, Jason Y Lee4, Serge Jothy5,3, Jeffrey Zaltzman1,3, Darren A Yuen6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical thrombectomy in the context of acute renal vein thrombosis (RVT) post-transplantation has had limited success, with considerable variation in the surgical techniques used. Unfortunately, it is usually followed by allograft nephrectomy within a few days if rapid allograft recovery does not ensue. We report a case of acute RVT in which nephrectomy was not performed despite a prolonged requirement for dialysis post-thrombectomy, but with recovery of renal function 2 weeks later. We also report the findings of serial MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging (DW-MRI) throughout the patient's recovery, which provided novel insights into allograft microvascular perfusion changes post-thrombectomy. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Case report; Delayed graft function; Diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging; Kidney transplantation; Renal vein thrombosis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28693502 PMCID: PMC5504730 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-017-0618-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Timeline of events plotted against a graph of creatinine trajectory over time. Resistive indices are presented as upper pole/inter-polar region/lower pole. The x axis has been scaled to highlight the greater density of events during the patient’s admission (days 0–31). RVT, renal vein thrombosis. AMR, antibody-mediated rejection. RI, resistive index. MRI-ff, diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging “f” fraction
Fig. 2Representative images of serial Doppler ultrasound exams of patient with renal vein thrombosis post-kidney transplantation. Initial post-operative ultrasound showing (a) spectral tracing of reversed diastolic flow in the transplant renal artery near its anastomosis with color Doppler showing turbulent flow, (b) reversed intra-renal artery diastolic flow, and (c) difficulty finding transplant renal vein flow. Following successful thrombectomy, an ultrasound with color Doppler showed (d) normalized diastolic flow in the transplant renal artery and (e) patency of the transplant renal vein with normal venous waveform using spectral Doppler tracing. (f) On post-operative day 20, despite ongoing poor renal function, a Doppler ultrasound revealed relatively normal waveforms and calculated resistive indices that were not in keeping with the histology seen on biopsy (see Table 1 for resistive indices)
Representative clinical and Doppler ultrasound imaging parameters
| Post-operative day (#) | Serum Creatinine (μmol/L) | Resistive Indices | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 352 | Upper pole: 0.8 | Pre-thrombectomy |
| Interpolar: 0.88 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.83 | |||
| 1 | 434 | Upper pole: 0.74 | Post-thrombectomy |
| Interpolar: 0.68–0.71 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.73 | |||
| 3 | 457 | Upper pole: 0.77 | |
| Interpolar: 0.74 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.73 | |||
| 4 | 590 | Upper pole: 0.78 | |
| Interpolar: 0.79 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.79 | |||
| 6 | 649 | Dialysis performed | |
| 7 | 449 | Upper pole: 0.81 | |
| Interpolar: 0.82 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.80 | |||
| 8 | 539 | Dialysis performed | |
| 9 | 379 | Upper pole: 0.80 | |
| Interpolar: 0.83 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.80 | |||
| 10 | 438 | Dialysis performed | |
| 12 | 427 | Biopsy performed | |
| 13 | 500 | Last dialysis session | |
| 14 | 274 | Upper pole: 0.93 | |
| Interpolar: 0.87 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.87 | |||
| 15 | 361 | ||
| 17 | 463 | ||
| 18 | 510 | Upper 0.83 | |
| Inter 0.87 | |||
| Lower 0.85 | |||
| 19 | 501 | ||
| 20 | 530 | Upper 1.0 | |
| Inter 0.86 | |||
| Lower 0.8 | |||
| 23 | 455 | DW-MRI “f” fraction 2% | |
| 30 | 325 | ||
| 46 | 221 | ||
| 48 | N/A | DW-MRI “f” fraction 4% | |
| 91 | N/A | Upper: 0.76 | |
| Inter: 0.76 | |||
| Lower pole: 0.75 | |||
| 96 | 193 | DW-MRI “f” fraction 7% |
Fig. 3Representative images of kidney biopsy performed on post-operative day 12. (a) A low power image of three of the five core biopsies, with two of the visualized cores demonstrating extensive cortical necrosis. Original magnification 12.5X. (b – c) Higher power images of areas of cortical necrosis, with evidence of complete destruction of glomerular and tubular structures, and associated inflammatory infiltrates. Original magnification 100X. Areas of preserved cortex demonstrated (d) capillaritis and interstitial inflammation, (e) tubulitis, and (f) peritubular capillary C4d staining. Original magnification 400X
Fig. 4Serial diffusion-weighted MRI scans demonstrated improvements in allograft perfusion following transplant renal vein thrombectomy. (a – c) Serial conventional T2 weighted images, with grossly abnormal high T2 signal throughout the allograft parenchyma. (a) POD 22 scan. (b) POD 48 scan. (c) Scan at 3 months post-transplant vein thrombectomy. (d – e) Serial pseudocolorized perfusion (“f” fraction) maps derived from diffusion-weighted MRI images, progressing from (d) minimal perfusion on POD 22, to improved but still abnormally low perfusion (e) on POD 48 and (f) at 3 months post-thrombectomy. The color bar depicts the magnitude of the perfusion fraction, with red indicating higher perfusion, and blue indicating lower perfusion