Publication | Closed Access
Reversed Diastolic Blood Flow at Duplex Doppler
23
Citations
6
References
1994
Year
Duplex UltrasonographyHypertensionReversed Flow PatternSurgeryNephrologyDiastolic FunctionBlood FlowGraft SurvivalDuplex DopplerPublic HealthChronic Kidney DiseaseCardiologyBlood Flow MeasurementCardiovascular ImagingTransplantationKidney TransplantBlood TransplantationUrologyCardiovascular DiseaseKidney TransplantationTransplant ArteriopathyMedicineRenal AllograftsGraft RejectionAnesthesiology
In 25 renal allografts out of 253 with graft dysfunction a reversed diastolic blood flow was observed at duplex ultrasonography during the first post-transplant month. Eleven grafts were lost and 14 survived. The cause of graft loss was arterial thrombosis (n = 1), venous thrombosis or obstruction (n = 4), steroid resistant acute rejection (n = 4) and acute tubular necrosis (ATN) (n = 2). The cause of graft dysfunction in the surviving grafts was ATN (n = 7) and acute allograft rejection (n = 7). Grafts with only peak-like or low velocity continuous diastolic flow reversal had a better prognosis (3 out of 15 were lost) than grafts with any other type of reversed flow pattern (8 out of 10 were lost). This difference was statistically significant (p < 0.01).
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