Arteriographic correlation in 30 patients with renal vascular disease diagnosed with multislice CT

To determine the usefulness of multislice computed tomography (MSCT) in the evaluation of renal vascular disease against a gold standard of digital subtraction angiography (DSA). We evaluated 30 patients with arterial hypertension and/or kidney failure that underwent MSCT to rule out a vascular caus...

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Published inRadiología Vol. 50; no. 5; p. 393
Main Authors Echevarría, J J, Miguélez, J L, López-Romero, S, Pastor, E, Ontoria, J M, Alustiza, J M, Fernández-Ruanova, B
Format Journal Article
LanguageSpanish
Published Spain 01.09.2008
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Summary:To determine the usefulness of multislice computed tomography (MSCT) in the evaluation of renal vascular disease against a gold standard of digital subtraction angiography (DSA). We evaluated 30 patients with arterial hypertension and/or kidney failure that underwent MSCT to rule out a vascular cause and DSA to confirm a vascular cause suspected at MSCT. MSCT examinations were performed on a 10-detector scanner with intravenous administration of 80 ml of iodinated contrast (300 mg iodine/ml) at a flow rate of 5 ml/s. A total of 71 renal arteries, 56 main and 15 accessory, were evaluated. Arterial stenoses were classified as: grade 0 (normal artery), grade I (stenosis < 50%), grade II (> or = 50% and < 70%), grade III (> or = 70%), grade IV (occlusion). Stenosis > or = grade II was considered hemodynamically significant. The findings at MSCT and DSA were identical in 56 (78.8%) renal arteries; MSCT overestimated the degree of stenosis in 13 (18.3%) cases. All grade III stenoses were detected at MSCT. In the diagnosis of hemodynamically significant stenosis, MSCT had a sensitivity of 96.5%, specificity 78.5%, accuracy 85.9%, positive predictive value 75.6%, and negative predictive value 97%. MSCT is a good noninvasive imaging technique for the evaluation of renal vessels; it is useful for screening patients with kidney disease to rule out potentially treatable vascular causes.
ISSN:0033-8338
DOI:10.1016/S0033-8338(08)76054-5