| Literature DB >> 3533201 |
E D Williams, C Parker, D Rankin, R R Roy.
Abstract
The clinical utility of radionuclide emission tomography of the kidney in comparison with conventional gamma-camera imaging has been assessed from scans of 60 patients suspected of having space-occupying lesions of the kidney. Nineteen patients had renal tumour, 17 had cysts and seven had renal pseudotumours; the remainder had no lesion. Objective trials using four observers showed only a slight, statistically insignificant advantage from the addition of tomographic sections to conventional images. However, in several individual cases tomography had aided diagnosis, particularly in obese patients, when an alternative non-invasive investigation (ultrasonography) was inconclusive. In seven patients a positive diagnosis of renal pseudotumour was made possible by tomography; definite identification of ectopic functioning cortical tissue at the location of a mass suspected after urography was considered to be a distinct diagnostic advantage gained from emission tomography of the kidney.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1986 PMID: 3533201 DOI: 10.1259/0007-1285-59-706-975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Radiol ISSN: 0007-1285 Impact factor: 3.039