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Reversed Diastolic Flow due to Subcapsular Hematoma

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This is a patient with a history of renal transplant in the clinical

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concern of Sir graft obstruction. And so we got a ultrasound and

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on the grayscale. Let me just everything looks quite abnormal. We

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can see a portion of the kidney here. But surrounding it

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we can see this rather large heterogeneous collection that causing

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some degree of deformity.

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As we look at it in different images we can maybe better

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appreciate a deformed for a renal transplant

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here surrounded by this large large collection and very heterogeneous

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appearing collection. There is some flow

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within the renal transplant but none within this collection itself.

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And as we interrogate some of the vessels we can see at least at the

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level of the main order the Highland there is reverse diastolic

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flow. So that finding is

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worrisome. You can see it very beautifully in this instance over here.

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In other portions, there may be some reverse

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diastolic flow here as well. And so really an

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abnormal finding we can see some in this location as well.

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And so remember when we see reverse diastole that's telling

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us that there is some sort of increased vascular

1:00

resistance within the kidney itself. It's

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a classic finding with renal vein thrombosis. And

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so the first thing you want to do look at the renal veins in this instance

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the real veins where patent the other thing that can do it or severe

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acute tubular necrosis severe rejection severe pilot

1:15

nephritis.

1:16

But one of the other things that can do is if you have a large collection

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that is compressing the kidney itself. We saw

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one case already of a subcaps or hematoma compressing

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the kidney resulting in essentially no diastolic flow,

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but it's also important to remember that if it's large enough

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it may also cause reverse diastolic flow in

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this instance. We can see the CT scan associated

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with this patient showing the right lower quadrant wheel

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transplant here in a very very large hematoma causing

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Mass Effect upon it resulting in

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the findings that we were seeing in the main renal artery

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on the ultrasound.

Report

Faculty

Mahan Mathur, MD

Associate Professor, Division of Body Imaging; Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging

Yale School of Medicine

Tags

Vascular

Ultrasound

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Kidneys

Iatrogenic

Genitourinary (GU)

CT

Body