Functional Sodium MRI Helps to Measure Corticomedullary Sodium Content in Normal and Diseased Human Kidneys.

Radiology

From the Lilibeth Caberto Kidney Clinical Research Unit (KCRU), London Health Sciences Centre (A.A., S.L., F.S., T.L.M., G.F., C.W.M.), Department of Medical Biophysics (T.L.M., T.D., T.J.S., C.W.M.), Departments of Paediatrics, Medicine and Pathology, and Laboratory Medicine, Paediatric Nephrology (G.F.), and Division of Nephrology, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry (A.A.H., C.W.M.), University of Western Ontario, 800 Commissioners Rd E, Room ELL-101, London, ON, Canada N6A 5W9; Robarts Research Institute, Western University, London, Canada (A.A., F.S., T.J.S.); and Lawson Health Research Institute, London, Canada (S.L., F.S., G.F., A.A.H., C.W.M.).

Published: May 2022

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Article Abstract

Background To the knowledge of the authors, urinary osmolarity is the only tool currently available to assess kidney corticomedullary gradient (CMG). Comparisons between CMG and urinary osmolarity and the use of modalities such as sodium MRI to evaluate renal disease in humans are lacking. Purpose To investigate the ability of sodium MRI to measure CMG dynamics compared with urinary osmolarity after water load in healthy volunteers and CMG in participants with kidney disease. Materials and Methods A prospective study was conducted from July 2020 to January 2021 in fasting healthy volunteers undergoing water load and participants with chronic kidney disease (CKD) from cardiorenal syndrome included in a clinical trial. In both groups, CMG was estimated by measuring the medulla-to-cortex signal ratio from sodium MRI at 3.0 T. A custom-built two-loop (diameter, 18 cm) butterfly radiofrequency surface coil, tuned for sodium frequency (33.786 MHz), was used to acquire renal sodium images. Two independent observers measured all sodium MRI cortical and medullary values for each region of interest to compute the intraclass correlation coefficient. Pearson correlation was performed between urinary osmolarity and CMG. Results Five participants with CKD (mean age, 77 years ± 12 [standard deviation]; all men) and 10 healthy volunteers (mean age, 42 years ± 15; six men, four women) were evaluated. A reduction was observed between baseline and peak urinary dilution time for both mean medulla-to-cortex ratios (1.55 ± 0.11 to 1.31 ± 0.09, respectively; < .001) and mean urinary osmolarity (756 mOsm/L ± 157 to 73 mOsm/L ± 14, respectively; < .001) in healthy volunteers. Medulla-to-cortex and corresponding urinary osmolarity were correlated in both groups ( = 0.22; < .001). Kidney sodium tissue content was successfully acquired in all five participants with CKD. The intraclass correlation coefficient measurement was 0.99 ( < .001). Conclusion Functional sodium MRI accurately depicted corticomedullary gradient (CMG) dynamic changes in healthy volunteers and demonstrated feasibility of CMG measurement in participants with reduced kidney function. Clinical trial registration no. NCT04170855. © RSNA, 2022 . See also the editorial by Laustsen and Bøgh in this issue.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.211238DOI Listing

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