Interactive Transcript
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This patient had a renal transplant and now is elevated creatinine
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and we were asked to performate ultrasound to
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evaluate the Theology of that and so we can look at this transplant
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and grayscale. Imaging looks pretty good the right lower quadrant
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metrics by 10.9 centimeters, no mass is no collections.
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We're looking at the national transverse plane doing color Imaging
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to ensure there's flow throughout the transplanted kidney. There's
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venous flow over here as we're interrogating the vessels inside
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the kidney itself.
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Let's look what happens. We interrogate some of the arteries here lower
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pole segmental artery. Now, let's actually looks
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a little bit different than some of the waveforms that we've seen
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in some of the other cases. Normally these renal
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artists should have nice sharp systolic up
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strokes and flow throughout diastole. Now this
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instance, we do have diastolic flow, but that Sharps systolic
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upstroke is missing and instead it's sort of an angle
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over here. And so that itself is
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a little bit worse and you can see how it's slanted over
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here.
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And also when we look at the peak systolic velocity, it's a
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little bit lower than what we would expect right and some
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of the other ones we've seen and we never quite got as low as 15
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centimeters per second. And so we see that
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in the lower pole segmental artery if we look at the interloper artery,
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it's more pronounced we can see that it's
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very very slanted and look at the peak systolic velocity
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here nine point three centimeters per
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second. And so this sort of waveform where there
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is diminished Peak systolic velocity and
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a long elevated time
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to reach the peak systolic velocities known as a Tardis parvis
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waveform and there's certain criteria
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that we can use in terms of the time to reach Peak systolic
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velocity. Generally if it's about 70 milliseconds, it's going
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to be Tardis parvis. It's going to be delayed up stroke oftentimes
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we can be subjective about it, but there are
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objective criteria for that. And so what this means when
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we look at these vessels and we see this waveform within the
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intraprenchymal arteries it tells us
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somewhere
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proximal to where we are interrogating in this
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renal transplant. There is some narrowing of
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the renal artery renal arteries stenosis somewhere.
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Right. So when we have a renal arteries stenosis the end result
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of that.
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Within the renal Transit is going to be a waveform that
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looks like this.
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And so here we are integrating the lower pole region. When we
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interrogate the upper pole region. We can see similar waveforms of
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that slanted appearance due to
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elevated time to reach the peak systolic velocity the peak
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systolic philosophy itself is quite diminished at 12. The interlobal
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arteries also looks similar. So throughout the renal transplant. We
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have Tardis parvis waveforms that tells us it's somewhere along the
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course of the renal artery that's in
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anastomosis with the external iliac artery. There's some degree
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of narrowing and so our next step is to really figure out where that narrowing is.
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And so we then start looking at the main
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renal artery itself.
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We can see at the hilum. It's quite elevated velocities of
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300. But that's again just one time point we need to look at everything else.
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Look at the mid portion of that renal artery 402 quite
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elevated velocities in that location
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and we can also see some aliasing which means
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that there's just turbulent flow in that region find that
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suggest that there is some degree renal arteries
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stenosis and close proximity or within that location itself.
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The external iliac artery proximal to all
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these findings essentially the inflow velocities are at 94
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and so we're really going from a velocity
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of about 94.
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To at least at the mid portion 408 so
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almost a four-fold change. We'll find the anastomosis velocity
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itself in a little bit but that itself tells
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us there's some degree of renal arteries stenosis in
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this patient that we have to interrogate as we
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find the anast most we can see that an ass to most is all
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the way up at 400. And so these constellation of
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findings are compatible through your monitors stenosis. It's
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important to remember what this looks like because this is the most common
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vascular complication in real transplants, which
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you're really looking for is a bunch of things within the
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renal transplant itself. You're looking for these Tardis parvis
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waveforms and then when you interrogate the renal artery itself,
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you potentially can see a side of narrow and grayscale imaging
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but what you're really going to be looking for is this aliasing as
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well as a jump and velocities of about 3.5
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times from the inflow
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to the area stenosis to suggest that that area
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is narrowed and physiologically significant narrowing
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now remember in the
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Immediate postoperative period post-operative Day
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Zero for example you sometimes can see elevated velocities this high
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but that's just due to edema causing narrowing in
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that location and that itself usually doesn't cause
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those Tardis Tardis waveforms more distally so an
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immediate postoperative period you may expect these high velocities and those
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will subside as the edema goes away. But if you're
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a couple of days out from the transplanting you're seeing these findings
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or that Tardis harvest waveforms in the kidney have to
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be worried about renal arteries stenosis.