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Hyperechogenic “rings” in the periphery of renal medullary pyramids as a sign of renal disease

✍ Scribed by Markku J. Päivänsalo; Matti J. Kallioinen; Jukka S. Merikanto; Pekka K. Jalovaara


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
558 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0091-2751

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✦ Synopsis


A rare sign of medullary abnormality, hyperechogenic "rings" in the peripheries of renal medullary pyramids, was detected in both kidneys in 21 patients, being associated with normally hypoechogenic medullary centers in 20 of these patients. Our results with 2 cases studied histologically suggest that fibrosis with and without calcifications is one reason for the hyperechogenicity of these medullary pyramids. The clinical history and laboratory tests (serum creatinine, proteinuria) showed signs of kidney disease in 52%, and a renal disease was suspected in an additional 38%. Eight of the patients had disturbances in blood potassium, calcium, or uric acid equilibrium, and 2 of them had a parathyroid abnormality. Calcifications were found on plain radiographs of the abdomen in 1 of the 13 patients. Two were totally asymptomatic and had normal laboratory findings. Hyperechogenic rings in the peripheries of renal medullary pyramids proved nonspecific and showed a poor correlation with the severity of renal disease.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Transient renal medullary hyperechogenic
✍ Thomas W. Riebel; Klaus Abraham; Rolf Wartner; Reinhold Müller 📂 Article 📅 1993 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 812 KB

## Abstract A prospective ultrasound study of the renal morphology of 51 neonates with no clinical signs of renal impairment showed transient medullary hyperechogenicity of varying intensity in 37%. These findings were made in the first few postnatal days, were not accompanied by any other echograp