Oral Exam - GU Flashcards

1
Q

Acute pylonephritis findings

A

DMSA
Striated uptake appearance on Tc-99m DMSA
□ Pattern usually extends toward hilum (scar tends to
be more superficial)

WBC study
○ In-111 WBC scan: No normal uptake in kidneys; ↑ uptake
sensitive and specific for pyelonephritis

○ Tc-99m HMPAO WBC scan: Normal uptake in kidneys
and bladder; ↓ sensitivity, specificity for pyelonephritis

Ga-67
○ Normal symmetrical Ga-67 renal uptake up to 48hr post
injection

○ Bilateral renal Ga-67 uptake > 48hr post injection:

  • Interstitial nephritis
  • Renal failure
  • Acute pylonephritis (unusual to be bilateral)
  • Lymphoma

○ Focal increased Ga-67 uptake:

  • Acute pyelonephritis
  • Malignancy - lymphoma, leukemia, metastases
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2
Q

DMSA protocol

A

– Tc-99m DMSA: 40-65% injected dose bound to cortical
proximal convoluted tubules 2 hr post injection

Alternative:
○ Tc-99m glucoheptonate scan

○ Posterior and anterior supine planar images with low- energy, all-purpose parallel hole collimator at 2 hr post injection
– Differential renal function calculated using geometric
mean method
□ Geometric mean: Square root of product of
anterior and posterior counts

○ SPECT for best 3D cortical evaluation
– If SPECT not available, anterior, posterior, and bilateral posterior oblique images
– High-or ultra-high-resolution collimator; 300-500 K/image
– If known or suspected horseshoe kidney, image from anterior to discern connecting bridge of renal tissue between lower pole moieties ventral to spine

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3
Q

Ddx cortical defect DMSA

A

Pylenephritis
Cortical scar

Renal mass
Renal cyst
Fetal lobulation - normal indentation between lobules
Interstitial nephritis - mimics diffuse bilateral pyelo on Ga-67
Splenic impression

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4
Q

Renogram - normal angiographic phase

A

○ Flow to kidneys is seen quickly after aorta
○ Cortex should accumulate radiotracer over 1-3 min
– Should be homogeneous
– Cortical defects may indicate scar
○ If decreased renal function, uptake will be delayed

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5
Q

Renogram - clearance phase

A

○ Calyceal activity within 5 min

○ Bladder activity within 10-15 min

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6
Q

Renogram - protocol

A

□ Adults: Up to 10 mCi Tc-99m MAG3 IV

– Patient supine ,gamma camera posterior

– Angiographic sequence
□ 1-2 sec images for 1-2 min

– Dynamic sequence
□ 15-60 sec images for 20-30 min

– Diuresis sequence
□ Patient given furosemide and additional 15-60 sec images for 20-30 min

Lasix
□ Adults: 0.5mg/kg (max:40mg)
□ Pediatrics: 1mg/kg (max:20mg)

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7
Q

High grade obstruction findings

A

Relative function: Cannot predict functional potential in face of high- grade obstruction

Angiographic - Normal to delayed

Clearance phase - Calyceal activity usually normal, unless renal function is impaired secondary to obstruction; no bladder activity if obstruction is upper tract and bilateral

Renogram: Progressive rise in activity, even after furosemide; delayed time to cortical peak; washout t1/2 > 20 min

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8
Q

Partial obstruction

A

Angiographic phase - Normal

Clearance phase - Normal calyceal activity time, bladder activity may be delayed if bilateral

Renogram: Washout delayed until furosemide or postvoid procedure, then will decrease but still delayed; low-grade (questionable clinical significance): t1/2 10-15 min; partial obstruction, clinically significant: t1/2 15-20 min +

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9
Q

Functional obstruction

A

Angiographic phase: Normal

Clearance phase - Calyceal activity < 5 min; may have delayed bladder activity

Renogram: Washout delayed until furosemide or postvoid procedure; then washes out normally (t1/2 < 10 min)

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10
Q

Renal artery stenosis

A

Angiographic phase - delayed

Clearance phase: Delayed calyceal activity time

Renogram: Normal time-activity curve appearance, but peak is delayed

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11
Q

VUR findings:

A

Nuclear cystogram
○ Reflux of Tc-99m pertechnetate from bladder into
ureter &/or renal collecting system on filling or voiding
○ Dynamic images during filling and voiding increases
detection of VUR, including transient reflux
○ Difficult to grade VUR on nuclear cystogram due to lack
of anatomic resolution
– Qualitatively reported as mild, moderate, or severe

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12
Q

Nuclear cystogram protocol

A

– Tc-99m pertechnetate or SC
□ 0.25-0.5mCi for infants and toddlers

– Bladder volume goal: [Ageinyears+2]x30cc
– Normal saline, water
– Gravity instill fluid 70-100 cm above patient via
catheter
– Record volume at which VUR occurs
– Record volume of voided urine

– 64x64 matrix
– Posterior images of pelvis and abdomen, unless
calculation of residual bladder volume is planned
– Fillingandvoidingdynamicimagesat5-10sec/frame,
posterior
– Oncebladdergoalvolumeisreached,instructpatient
to void
– Prevoid and postvoid static images, 3-5 minutes each

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13
Q

Ddx VUR

A

Urine contamination

Bladder diverticulum

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14
Q

VUR Grading Nucs

A

○ Mild: Reflux in ureter
○ Moderate: Reflux to nondilated ureter and renal pelvis
○ Severe: Reflux to dilated collecting system

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15
Q

Renal transplant tracers

A

○ Tc-99m MAG3
– Renal tubular agent, preferred for renal transplant evaluation

○ Tc-99m DTPA
– Slower clearance than MAG3, limited utility in cases of
poor renal function with extraction fraction &laquo_space;MAG3
(cleared by glomerular filtration)

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16
Q

Renal transplant protocol

A

Baseline renogram at 24-48hr to assess function and
allow better differentiation of ATN and AR

○ Patient position: Supine with camera anterior, centered
over side of pelvis containing transplant
○ Camera: Low-energy, all-purpose collimator
○ Computer: Acquire study in 2 phases, angiogram and
functional

– Angiogram: Dynamic 1-2 sec/frame for 60 sec
– Functional: 15-60 -sec frames for 20-30 min followed
by prevoid and postvoid images

○ Radiotracer
– Tc-99m MAG3: Up to 10 mCi

17
Q

Renal transplant - normal findings

A

○ Perfusion to allograft: Normally within 4 sec of
radiotracer bolus passing through iliac artery
○ Normal peak cortical activity 3-5 min post injection
○ Normal renal transit: Tracer in collecting system, bladder
by 6 min
○ By end of exam, cortex should clear or be significantly
less than early in exam if no cortical retention

18
Q

ATN findings

A
  • Classically presents with relatively preserved perfusion and delayed uptake/excretion (tubular agents)
  • Abnormal baseline renal scan at 24hr (AR typically occurs later)
  • Bladder activity classically absent; background activity increases over time (e.g., gallbladder with MAG3)
19
Q

Acute rejection

A
  • Perfusion in AR generally worse than function: Often technically difficult to visualize
  • ↑cortical retention compared with baseline from 1 week to < 1 year: Sensitive, fairly specific for AR
20
Q

Drug toxicity

A

• Imaging appearance is similar to and difficult to distinguish from ATN (preserved perfusion and poor tubular function)
○ Typically presents later than ATN (time course very
important)

21
Q

Renovascular HTN: high probability scan

A

○ High probability (> 90%)
– MAG-3: ↑ peak time (by 2-3 min or at least 40%)
– DTPA: ↓ peak and ↓ relative uptake or GFR > 10%
– MAG-3: Increase in 20-or30-min/peak ratio of ≥ 0.15
from baseline study
– Decrease in MAG-3uptake > 10%
– Marked unilateral parenchymal retention of DTPA
after ACEI compared with baseline study

22
Q

Renovascular HTN protocol:

A

Prep:
– Stop ACEI 3-7 days prior to exam
– Hydrate p.o.; 7 mL/kg 30-60 min before study
– Position patient supine with camera posterior for
native kidneys and anterior for renal transplant
– NPO 4-6 hrs for best absorption of ACE-i

– 1-day protocol (high probability of disease): 1mCi low-dose baseline followed by 5-10 mCi high-dose ACEI scan

Captopril 25-50mg PO crushed; BP Q5-10 min x 1hr

○ Acquisition
– Camera: Low-energy, parallel hole collimator; 15-20% photopeak centered at 140 keV; large field of view

23
Q

RVH - intermediate probability study

A

Abnormal baseline findings that are unchanged after ACEI
– Small, poorly functioning kidney (< 30%) may not
respond appropriately
– Symmetric bilateral abnormalities most often due to
factors such as dehydration
– Cortical retention, ratio counts at 20 to 3 minutes
(20/3 ratio) ~ 0.1-0.5
– Reduced uptake of DTPA of 5-9%

24
Q

Homsy’s sign

A

High grade obstruction induced by high flow states

Initially see normal clearance, then retention

25
Q

Renal infarction

A

Photopenia over kidney

Possible case - aneurysm on blood pool imaging, then photopenic kidneys due to dissection

26
Q

Duplicated collecting system

A

Look for bladder ureterocele + retained activity in obstructed upper pole

27
Q

RAS

A

Can have delayed uptake and excretion relative to normal side

28
Q

Nuclear cystogram

A

Assess prevoid phase, voiding phase, and post-void

29
Q

Non-visualized kidney

A
Nephrectomy
Ectopically located
RA stenosis/occlusion
High grade obstruction
MCDK/Poor function
30
Q

Renal transplant

A

Think about urinoma

31
Q

Photopenic transplant kidney.

A

Arterial or venous thrombosis
Hyperacute rejection
Acute cortical necrosis

32
Q

Dilated ureter on renogram

A

UVJ obstruction
VUR
Primary megaureter

33
Q

Acute pyleo ddx on DMSA

A

Renal scarring
Renal tumour
Cyst

34
Q

Photopenia in portion of the kidney on flow and delayed - no flow or function

A

Infarct

Cyst

35
Q

Normal flow and extraction but delayed or absent excretion

A

Obstruction
Medical disease
ATN

If transplant, also include
Rejection
Drug toxicity (cyclosporin)

36
Q

Renal transplant findings

A

Vascular occlusion/RA thrombosis/RV thrombosis - photopenia over whole kidney

Infarct - focal photopenia, sometimes with hyperemic rim

Hyperacute rejection - photopenia over whole kidney

Acute rejection - Decreased flow, otherwise similar to ATN. Worsens on short term follow-up

ATN - normal flow and extraction with impaired excretion. Should improve on F/U

37
Q

Hypertrophic column of Bertin

A

Renal cortex extends into Medulla, can appear mass-like

38
Q

Quantitative indices of renal function

A

Peak time - reflects cortical extraction/uptake ( normal 3-5 min)