Evaluation of renal ischemia with 99mTc-pyrophosphate

Abstract
Renal ischemia injury was induced by transient 30-min occlusion of the main renal artery in five rabbits and by transient 60-min occlusion in four rabbits. The vessels to the contralateral kidneys were ligated in all nine animals and in six additional control rabbits. Renal blood flow was restored immediately following the transient ischemia. Twenty-four hours later, 99mTc-pyrophosphate was injected and renal uptake was monitored for 100 s at 10-min intervals for 90 min following injection. At 90 min postinjection, the animals were killed and the percent injected dose remaining in the kidneys was calculated for three animals in each group. At 60 min postinjection, in vivo activity in the 30-min ischemic kidneys was 2.3 times greater than that of controls, and activity in the 60-min ischemic kidneys 4.6 times greater than that of controls. These results suggest that 99mTc-pyrophosphate scanning may be useful in assessing slight ischemic damage to the kidney.