Can careful ultrasound examination of the urinary tract exclude vesicoureteric reflux in the neonate?
- 1 October 1997
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 70 (838) , 977-982
- https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.70.838.9404197
Abstract
The aim of the study was to determine whether a urinary tract appearing normal when assessed by meticulous ultrasound (US) examination may coexist with vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) and whether a normal US scan can be used to exclude VUR, thereby avoiding unnecessary voiding cystourethrography (VCUG). The US features of 35 neonates with known VUR were reviewed. Criteria studied included pelvic dilatation above 7 mm on a transverse scan, calyceal or ureteral dilatation, pelvic or ureteral wall thickening, absence of the corticomedullary differentiation (CMD) and signs of renal dysplasia (small kidney, thinned or hyperechoic cortex and cortical cysts); all signs that have been shown to result from or to be associated with VUR. 57 refluxing renal units (RRU) were found among the 35 patients. VUR was bilateral in 22. Among the 57 RRU, at least one US anomaly that would have prompted VCUG was present in 50 (87.7%). Pelvic dilatation above 7 mm was present in 29 RRU (50.9%) only. Calyceal dilatation was present in 24 RRU, the dilatation involving the calyces but not the renal pelvis in seven. Ureteral dilatation was observed in 15 RRU. Pelvic or ureteral wall thickening was present in seven RRU. CMD was absent in 32 RRU (56.1%). US signs of dysplasia were found in 19 RRU. No US anomaly was found in seven RRU (12.3%) in six patients. A careful and meticulous US examination of the neonatal urinary tract allows the detection of over 87% of RRU by showing at least one sonographic abnormality. It is concluded that a normal appearing urinary tract on US does not usually coexist with VUR and that in such cases VCUG is not necessary.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Primary vesicoureteric reflux--how useful is postnatal ultrasound?Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1996
- The origin of vesico‐ureteric reflux in male newborns: further evidence in favour of a transient fetal urethral obstructionBritish Journal of Urology, 1996
- Correlation of Prenatal Renal Pelvic Anteroposterior Diameter with Outcome in InfancyJournal of Urology, 1996
- Mild dilatation of the fetal kidney: a follow-up studyBritish Journal of Urology, 1994
- Mild fetal hydronephrosis indicating vesicoureteric reflux.Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal & Neonatal, 1994
- Sonographically demonstrated thickening of the renal pelvis in childrenPediatric Radiology, 1992
- Diagnosis and treatment of fetal urinary tract abnormalitiesThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1992
- Clinical significance of antenatal calyceal dilatation detected by ultrasoundThe Lancet, 1990
- Reflux nephropathy secondary to intrauterine vesicoureteric refluxJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1990