Interactive Transcript
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Here, we have an ultrasound image for a patient
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who is status post renal transplant
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and we're asked to evaluate the alligraph. And so we're
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using ultrasound as our first line Imaging modality to
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do so, it's important to remember that with ultrasound. We
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typically can use high frequency transducers about five
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megahertz to evaluate with these renal transplants due to
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the relatively superficial location in the pelvis. If
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you see this transplant here, this is really right
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beneath the abdominal wall. And so these high frequency transducers
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can really evaluate them very nicely. Now the
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first thing I do when I look at these renal transplants is evaluated
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gray scale appearance and sometimes the
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cortical mentally differentiation give me a little bit more pronounced due
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to the superficial or relative superficial
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location of the renal transplant, which is essentially right
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beneath the transducer in this instance. Look at
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the gray scale image. You measure the transplant and it's
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length
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You look for evidence for hydronephrosis. We shouldn't
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really see hydronephrosis, but it is important to remember
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that you sometimes may see a mild amount of fullness the
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renal collecting systems, which is expected to be within normal
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range of its very mild. There are many reasons why this
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can happen one reason is that you know,
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you essentially have now one kidney doing the work of two so you
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generally have more fullness in the renal collecting system. You also
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have a relative loss of autonomic innervation in
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these renal collecting systems such that can't necessarily regulate when
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it needs to empty. It's collecting systems
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into the bladder and so generally tends to be a little bit more Fuller and
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so on the grayscale image, I'm just looking for big abnormalities
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mass is collection. I measure the length of
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the kidney I move on to color images and it's important to demonstrate
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there's color flow throughout the renal transplant and there's
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any focal areas of Lack of Color flow. You
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really should interrogate that and figure out why there's no flow in
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that region. You can use color doppler images you can use more sensitive
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techniques to flow. So just powered up imag
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as well
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Here we have some more grayscale images looking in the transverse plane
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of the kidney and then you start to evaluate some
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of the intraprenchymal renal arteries using color and
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spectral Doppler Imaging.
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And you're really looking at upper pull arteries and lower pole arteries.
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So here's his annotated right lower quadrant upper pull
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at the level of the second mental renal arteries in
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which you want to see is these nice relatively low
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resistance waveform with Sharps histolic up
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strokes and continued flow throughout diastole. We
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do also measure resistive indices in real transplant
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patients Within These parental arteries
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resistive Indus is really a measure of the vascular resistance
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within some of these vessels and it's calculated by
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taking the peaksystolic velocity subtracting it
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in the end diastolic velocity and dividing at all
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over the peak systolic velocity.
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And so when you do that ratio over here, you're going
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to get in this instance 0.56. And normally anything from
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0.5 to 0.7 is appropriate
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for the renal transplant. And so
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we interrogate in different areas here. We have the upper pole segmental artery.
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That's interrogated. Here we go to some of the other arteries here
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that are interrogated and we also similarly try
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to look at the veins and you want to make sure there's nice venous flow
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throughout the transplanted. Kidney and here we're
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going to the lower pole segmental, you know arteries lower pulse mental
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renal veins.
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Sometimes it's very difficult to differentiate the arteries and
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veins which are very small and adjacent to each other. So here in
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this particular slice. We have waveforms from
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both the artery as well as the vein but there is nice venous
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flow throughout this transplanted kidney. These are some
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of the other arteries here that showing good systolic upstrokes with
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appropriate resistive indices.
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Thereafter we look at the main renal artery in
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the main renal vein and here we can see the main renal artery In
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Vein adjacent to one another.
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Main renal vein has appropriate flow. It's
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monophasic. It may be slightly pulsatile, depending
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on the cardiac status of the patient.
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And there's no real normal threshold for what velocities we
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except for these renal transplants in the main renal vein. So
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we generally just sort of compare different segments and see
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if there's any major differential between them.
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Here we're evaluating the main real artery and we
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really evaluated at least three different segments including
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the higher region, which we have a velocity of
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152.
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More distally with a velocity of 164 mid
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portion at 184 and then right
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at the anastomosis at 176 and in each of
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these we're seeing a nice systolic upstroke with Continuous Flow throughout diastole.
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So these are completely appropriated waveforms for
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the main renal artery.
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We're also going to be evaluating the external iliac artery both beyond the
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anastomosis this instance velocity of 132. And
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then just prior to the anastomosis velocity
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of 134 and to
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evaluate if there's any stenosis or really abnormal narrowing of
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the main renal artery. We're really looking at ratios and so once we
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have all these velocities we try to see if there's
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a differential ratio typically of 3.5 to
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1 if there is an increase in that velocities across
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different segments, we consider that there to be
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some abnormality with the renal artery some narrowingers stenosis.
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We're also going to evaluate the external iliac veins to ensure
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that there's good flow throughout it. And finally we get some grayscale
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images of the bladder to make sure there's no clear bladder abnormalities.