Monitoring renal allograft rejection with duplex sonography |
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Authors: | London N J Aldoori M I Bates J A Lodge V G Irving H C Giles G R |
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Affiliation: | University Department of Surgery, St. James's University Hospital, Leeds, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Thirty-six renal allograft recipients were monitored by serial duplex Doppler ultrasound studies post-transplant and during early rejection. A separate reproducibility study demonstrated no significant inter- or intra-operator variability in measurements of resistive index of an interlobar artery (RI) (2.1% [1.5%] and 3.2% [2.3%] respectively, mean [standard error] of coefficients of variance). Twenty-one patients had rejection within 3 weeks of transplantation. These grafts showed greater overall rises in the RI, from day 2 to day 5 post-transplant, than the grafts which had no rejection. Eleven of the 21 patients required more than one course of methyl-prednisolone for persistent or recurring rejection. These grafts had higher RI on the day rejection was diagnosed (81 [7.3], median [interquartile range]) compared with the remaining 10 patients (68.6 [8.7]). The 11 grafts with persistent rejection had higher RI (p less than 0.005, Mann-Whitney U-test) on day 2 post-transplant (76 [3.9]) compared with the 10 grafts successfully treated with a single course of methyl-prednisolone (63.2 [10.9]). This study demonstrates that grafts with an RI of greater than 70 on day 2 post-transplant are likely to have rejection requiring additional treatment (sensitivity--100%, specificity--80%). These patients may be candidates for earlier or alternative anti-rejection therapy. |
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