Saturday, 4 April 2020
Friday, 3 April 2020
NEONATAL KIDNEY --USG
1.The sonographic appearance of the
kidneys in the neonate differs from that in older children in respect of
a.more lobulation
b.much less renal sinus
echogenicity
c..very echogenic cortex
d.CM differentiation extremely
well
e.cortex thicker relative to
the size of pyramid
ans 1.e
Neonates have much less renal sinus fat than
in older children, and the central renal sinus echogenicity is uncommonly
appreciated at this age.
The immature neonatal cortex is very echogenic; in contrast to
that in older children, it is hyperechoic relative to the liver—even more so in
premature neonates. Because of this, sonography depicts corticomedullary
differentiation extremely well .Postnatally, the echogenicity of the cortex
gradually decreases, and it is usually hypoechoic relative to the liver by 4
months of age, but occasionally this process takes until 6 months.
Normal renal pyramids are
hypoechoic relative to the renal cortex, independent of patient age, and are
more echogenic than normal urine in the collecting system, which is anechoic .
Compared with the cortex in older children, the immature cortex in
the neonate is thinner relative to the size of the pyramids. Therefore, the
pyramids appear relatively large .
To those unfamiliar with this normal neonatal appearance, the
relatively large, normal, hypoechoic pyramids may be misinterpreted as dilated
calices or renal cystic disease and the relatively thinner hyperechoic cortex
may be misinterpreted as cortical scarring or even ischemic changes.
Figure . Normal sonographic appearance of the renal pyramids in young infants. (a) Transverse sonogram of a neonatal kidney shows good corticomedullary differentiation. The hypoechoic pyramids normally appear
relatively large at this age. (b) Focused longitudinal sonogram of a kidney, obtained with a linear-array transducer,
shows striations of the parenchyma, which are better appreciated in the cortex than in the pyramids.
The echogenic structures (arrows) represent the collapsed fornices of the calices (which are not distended with urine) together with some renal sinus fat.
REF --RADIOGRAPHICS
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