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Chronic Rejection/Drug Toxicity

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This is a patient who had a real transplant about

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six years prior to this Imaging study.

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There were metrics suggesting. The transit wasn't

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working very well. And so in ultrasounds obtained to evaluate it

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we start off looking at this trance

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Center of grayscale Imaging and it's placed in

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the right lower quadrant as most transplants are and looks reasonably. Well on

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the gray skill limit itself the measures about 11.7 centimeters.

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I'm not seeing any masses. No obvious collections.

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There's a little bit of fullness of the collecting system

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that degree is probably acceptable.

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we do see color images suggesting that there's flow

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in this renal transplant and

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when we start to interrogate some of the vessels there

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is Venous flow. We look at the real arteries

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segmental upper plovino arteries nice Sharps isolic up

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strokes, but the diastolic flow is quite low that

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anti-stolic velocity of about 3.89 you do

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the math that results in a resistive index of about 0.88. Remember

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anything about 0.8 is

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a little bit too high and suggests that there's some

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degree of increased vascular resistance within this real transplant

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itself. And so we can certainly interrogate other

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regions the interlobal arteries that shows a similar resistance 0.88.

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Here segmental lower pole 0.87 interloball

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here potentially up to one where you

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don't see any diastolic flow.

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So you're sort of looking around the kidney in

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and everywhere you're interrogating those residencies are quite high point

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eight eight point eight seven up to one. So there's

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something going wrong with the kidney and it's

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not functioning properly.

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Given the time frame in which we're observing this

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this patient how to transplant about six years ago.

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Possibilities are one of two either chronic rejection

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or potentially drug toxicity.

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And the Imaging appearance of those will be quite

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similar and the time frame which they occur will be quite similar and

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it's going to be tough to sort of figure that out based on

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Imaging those ideologies are amongst the most common

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cause of late graft loss and

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it's defined really is deterioration of the

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renal function which occurs at least three months post-surgery in

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the absence of any other causes that you can

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figure out for the craft loss.

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As I said, you know chronic rejection can

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look like this and I said drug toxicity and

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the drugs were talking about unfortunately are some

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of the drugs that can also be used in the renal transplant immunosuppressive

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regimen so those drugs itself can sometimes

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cause nephrotoxicity that's one of the side effects and

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so the patient is unlucky that may occur as well.

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And so the Imaging appearance is basically going to

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be a kidney with extremely high resistive indices. And again,

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you just have to sort of figure out when this is occurring if

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it occurs within the first say three days this ideology

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will be most likely to tubular necrosis. If it

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occurs within the first three weeks, it's probably going to be acute rejection

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that occurs after three months probably going

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to be chronic rejection. And if the

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patient is been on medications for a long period of

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time for the immunosuppressant and you see these findings then potentially this

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could be related to drug toxicity.

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

Ultrasound

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Kidneys

Idiopathic

Iatrogenic

Genitourinary (GU)

Drug related

Body