Abstract: | This study was undertaken to determine the nature of pressure changes in manometric studies of renal pelvis and calyces. In previous studies in pigs it has been assumed that pressure increases occur in the contracting segments of the renal pelvis and calyces, but our observations suggested that these increases were actually due to distension of noncontracted segments. Pressures were recorded with two catheters introduced percutaneously into the pyelocalyceal system with simultaneous video recording of the fluoroscopic image. There was no pressure rise in the calyces or the renal pelvis when these segments contracted; however, pressure rose when the noncontracted calyces were distended by a remote contraction ring. These findings confirmed the observations at kinetic urography. They agreed with the hydrodynamic experience that the pressure in a ring-shaped contracted segment is lower than upstream and downstream of that segment. It was concluded that if the porcine pyelocalyceal system is a valid model of the human, the pressure increases, assumed to be contractions, were actually caused by the injection and distension of the noncontracted segments. |