Pilot study: use of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography in feline renal transplant recipients.

J Feline Med Surg

3 Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.

Published: April 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the use of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography for assessing kidney function in cats post-transplantation and identified a case of delayed allograft ischemia.
  • The imaging involved microbubble contrast to analyze renal blood flow and perfusion patterns, with specific metrics calculated for various renal areas.
  • The results showed typical perfusion patterns in healthy cats, while one cat with suspected transplantation issues exhibited abnormal blood flow, correlating with increased serum creatinine levels.

Article Abstract

Objectives The study aims were to evaluate the feasibility of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography in feline renal transplant recipients in the post-transplantation period and to report findings in a case with presumptive delayed allograft ischemia. Methods Cats were imaged postoperatively using contrast harmonic ultrasonography after a bolus injection of a microbubble contrast medium. Time/mean pixel intensity curves were generated for cortical and medullary regions of interest in the renal allograft in each cat. Arrival time, time to peak, wash-in slope, wash-out slope, mean transit time and renal blood flow were calculated for each area. Results Within the renal cortices of cats without ureteral obstruction 1 day post-transplantation, arrival time was 2.0-6.3 s, time to peak was 3.6-30.1 s, wash-in rate was 2.45-41.14 mean pixel intensity (MPI)/s, wash-out rate was -2.01 to -0.47 MPI/s and blood flow was 6.1-106.5 MPI/s. Ratio mean transit time was 0.29-1.29. Typical cortical and medullary perfusion patterns were observed in these cats. In one cat with delayed graft ischemia followed by presumptive acute transplant rejection, dynamic and heterogeneous cortical and medullary perfusion was demonstrated. Decreases in cortical blood flow were paralleled by elevated serum creatinine. Conclusions and relevance Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography can be used in feline renal transplant recipients and provides both qualitative and quantitative data regarding renal allograft perfusion.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11129230PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1098612X17713855DOI Listing

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