Publication | Closed Access
Renal sonography in the differentiation of upper from lower urinary tract infection
55
Citations
6
References
1986
Year
Normal KidneysGlomerulonephritisUrological ResearchUrologyUrogenital RadiologyRenal SonographyRenal VolumeMedicineRenal PathologyIga GlomerulonephritisPediatricsKidney FailureUltrasoundAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseKidney SizeNephrology
Increase in renal volume and asymmetry in kidney size determined by sonography proved to be a valuable diagnostic criterion for differentiation between infections of the upper and lower urinary tract in 175 children: acute bacterial interstitial nephritis (79) and lower urinary tract infection (96). Kidney volume in acute pyelonephritis increased to an average of 175% of normal. In 71% of cases, affected kidneys showed an enlargement of at least 2 SD when compared with a group of 325 children without kidney pathology. Most impressive kidney enlargement was seen during the first year of life. In 50% of cases, acute pyelonephritis caused a bilateral increase in renal size and/or distinct volume asymmetry. Kidneys of patients with lower urinary tract infections had a mean volume of 99.68% and a physiologic volume asymmetry comparable to normal kidneys.
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