Sonography in the diagnosis of acute renal allograft rejection and cyclosporine nephrotoxicity

Abstract
High-resolution real-time sonography was used at the time an allograft biopsy was performed on 58 renal transplant recipients to elucidate the cause of posttransplantation decline in renal function. These procedures were performed within 3 months of transplantation. Fifty-four out of 58 patients were on a cyclosporine-steroid regimen. Acute rejection was diagnosed if one or more of the following findings was present on sonogram: transplant swelling, increased conspicuity of the medullary pyramids, medullary pyramid enlargement, decreased renal-sinus fat, and pelvi-infundibular thickening. Correlation of sonography and histopathologic findings showed that sonography cannot be used independently to diagnose rejection or to distinguish between cyclosporine nephrotoxicity and rejection. A creatinine level of 2.5 mg/dl was then randomly selected as a threshold level to possibly improve the sonographic results, anticipating that above this threshold an abnormal sonogram would invariably be recorded in the prese...

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