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Title: [Evaluation of renal function with dynamic Gd-DTPA-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging after shock wave lithotripsy]. Author: Izumi H, Shiokawa H, Kurokawa J, Murata K, Mashimo S, Koshiba K. Journal: Nihon Hinyokika Gakkai Zasshi; 1992 Mar; 83(3):298-304. PubMed ID: 1564833. Abstract: It has already been reported that MR imaging is a superior imaging technique to detect minute anatomical changes in the kidney after ESWL. However, the morphological abnormalities found by MR imaging do not necessarily mean deterioration of the renal function. The purpose of this study is to assess the morphological changes in the kidney and changes in renal function after the ESWL treatment by dynamic MR imaging. A total of 16 patients underwent axial MR imaging before and after ESWL. Dynamic MR was also performed on 11 patients of them within 24 hours after ESWL, and both before and after ESWL in the remaining 5 patients. Eight kidneys showed morphological abnormalities on T1-weight images, and 4 of them showed loss of corticomedullary demarcation. Furthermore, the first MR imaging after injection of GdDTPA revealed focal areas of decreased signal intensity in only 2 of these 4 patients who showed loss of corticomedullary demarcation on previous MR images. However, the second MR imaging 6 months after ESWL showed no abnormality in either of them. The percent contrast of signal intensity increase to fat signal intensity was one minute after GdDTPA injection compared before and after ESWL in 5 of the 16 patients. The values before and after ESWL revealed no statistically significant difference, and no patient showed any remarkable decrease of signal intensity after ESWL. These results suggest that loss of corticomedullary demarcation after ESWL does not necessarily reflect damage to the renal function and that the shock-wave exposure causes no permanent damage to the renal function but only temporary impairment.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]