| Literature DB >> 33046028 |
Isabella Pisani1, Roberto Giacosa2, Sara Giuliotti3, Dario Moretto4, Giuseppe Regolisti4, Chiara Cantarelli4, Augusto Vaglio5,6, Enrico Fiaccadori4, Lucio Manenti4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is a rare disease characterized by cystic dilatation of papillary collecting ducts. Intravenous urography is still considered the gold standard for diagnosis. We identified a cohort of patients from our outpatient clinic with established diagnosis of MSK to outline some ultrasonographic characteristics that may help establish a diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic renal failure; Medullary sponge kidney; Nephrolithiasis; Renal cystic disease; Ultrasonography
Year: 2020 PMID: 33046028 PMCID: PMC7552549 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-02084-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Clinical and ultrasound characteristics of the patients
| Characteristic | Value ( |
|---|---|
| Men/Women (n/n) | 4/14 |
| Age –mean y (range) | 50 (28–82) |
| Family history –no. (%) | 10 (56) |
| Prognosis-no.(%) | |
| Normal kidney function | 5 (28) |
| CKD | 13 (72) |
| Hemodialysis | 2 (11) |
| Kidney transplant | 3 (17) |
| Clinical signs and symptoms-no. (%) | |
| Microhematuria | 9 (50) |
| Proteinuria | 8 (44) |
| Urinary tract infection | 6 (33) |
| Renal colic | 6 (33) |
| Asymptomatic | 2 (11) |
| Not available | 1 (5.5) |
| Imaging study-no. (%) | |
| Intravenous urography | 0 (0) |
| CT | 7 (39) |
| Ultrasound | 18 (100) |
| Renal cysts characteristics at ultrasound | |
| Unilateral/bilateral (n/n) | 2/15 |
| Not described (n) | 1 |
| Medullary (n) | 6 |
| Cortical (n) | 1 |
| Cortical and medullary (n) | 5 |
| Parenchymal (n) | 3 |
| Not described (n) | 3 |
| Diameter of medullary cysts (mm) | From 1 mm to 30 mm |
| Diameter of cortical cysts (mm) | From 25 mm to 65 mm |
| Renal calcifications or renal stones-no. (%) | 16 (89) |
| Indication for ultrasound-no. (%) | |
| Follow up of CKD | 8 (44) |
| Follow up of MSK or renal stones | 7 (39) |
| Family history of renal disease | 3 (17) |
| Relevant comorbidities (n) | |
| Diabetes | 3 |
| Nephrectomy | 1 |
| Hypertension | 1 |
CKD Chronic kidney disease, CT Computed tomography, MSK Medullary sponge kidney, y Years
Fig. 1a B-mode image representing the right kidney, scanned with a 5.0 MHz convex probe. Note the several cystic dilations of the inner medulla (white arrow) and segmental linear hypercoic strands (arrowhead) (Esaote MyLab Seven, 5.0 MHz convex probe); b Renal stone (4 mm) in the mid calyx and parenchimal cyst in a patient with MSK (Philips iU 22, multifrequency convex probe C5–1)
Fig. 2a Right kidney showing inversion of the normal cortico-medullary echogenicity pattern: in this patient with nephrocalcinosis, the pyramids and medulla are strikingly hyperechogenic, because of the deposition of crystals (Philips iU 22, multifrequency convex probe C5–1); b B-mode image of the right kidney, obtained with a 12.5 MHz linear probe. Cysts of the inner medulla are better recognized (Esaote MyLab Seven, 12.5 MHz linear probe)
Main differential diagnosis between medullary sponge kidney and other cystic kidney diseases
| Diseases | Bilateral/Unilateral | Kidney size | Ultrasound appearance of kidneys and cysts | Hereditary/acquired | Genetics | Clinical findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral | Increased | Presence of multiple, variably sized, cortical and medullary cysts, that increase in number and size with time | Hereditary (autosomal dominant) | PKD1, PKD2, GANAB | Chronic kidney disease typically occurs in adulthood; cysts could be found in other organs (eg: liver, pancreas, seminal vesicles); possible presence of intracranial aneurysms | |
| Bilateral | Small to normal size kidneys | Multiple cysts in the medulla and at the cortico-medullary junction with cortical sparing | Herditary (autosomal dominant) | MCKD1 (now MUC1), MCKD2 | Chronic renal failure manifesting in adulthood; no associated syndrome | |
| Bilateral | Moderately enlarged (infantile NPH); small to normal size (juvenile and adolescent/adult NPH) | Small, hyperechoic kidneys with loss of cortico-medullary differentiation; progressive cystic disease with numerous small discrete cysts in the medulla and cortico-medullary junction | Hereditary (autosomal recessive) | More than ten mutations identified until now (eg; NPHP 1 e NPHP4) | Polyuria and polydipsia because of renal concentration defect; growth retardation; chronic anemia resistant to therapy; chronic renal failure with end-stage renal disease developing in infancy or at a median age of 13 years (juvenile NPH) or 19 (adolescent/adult NPH). Presence of associated syndromes | |
| Unilateral | Small kidney that disappear in adulthood | Kidney replaced by noncommunicating cysts with a central region of soft tissue; absence or severe atrophy of ipsilateral ureter, renal collecting system and renal vasculature | Acquired | None | Often detected in utero or infancy; possible association with contralateral vescico-ureteral reflux (5–43% of cases) | |
| Bilateral | Small | Atrophic hyperechoic kidneys with cysts (at least three in each kidney) varying in size and complexity | Acquired | None | Presence of end-stage renal disease, the incidence increases with the length of time on dialysis; cysts could be complicated (hemorrhage, nephrolithiasis); possible development of renal malignancy | |
| Generally bilateral, mild cases can be diagnosed as unilateral by ultrasound | Normal (size is more linked to the presence or absence of chronic kidney disease) | Hypoechoic medullary areas with hyperechoic spots and microcystic dilatation of papillary zone; multiple calcifications (linear, small stones or calcified intracystic sediment) in each papilla. In some cases nephrocalcinosis could be described | Hereditary in a half of cases (autosomal dominant) | Mutations of GDNF (12% of cases). Genetics under investigation | Typically observed in renal stone formers; possible presentation as pielonephritis; michroematuria and episods of machroematuria associated with nephrolithiasis. Possible presence of hyperparatiroidism. Association with tubular defect (eg: distal renal tubular acidosis, hypocitraturia defective urinary concentration, an altered Tm (transport maximum) for glucose, phosphate and para-aminohippuric acid, low molecular weight proteinuria). |