Abdominal Doppler and pathology part IV renal arteries

Description

Vascular Flashcards on Abdominal Doppler and pathology part IV renal arteries, created by ecmarchese on 01/02/2014.
ecmarchese
Flashcards by ecmarchese, updated more than 1 year ago
ecmarchese
Created by ecmarchese almost 11 years ago
39
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
May arise from aorta, above or below the main renal arteries Accessory renal arteries
Where will the accessory renal arteries pass on the right side? Anterior to the IVC
Is the RRV shorter than the LRV? Yes
Where does the LRV course? Between the SMA and aorta
What is the normal arterial flow for the renals? Low resistant with continuous diastolic flow
What is the normal venous flow for renals? Phasic, varies with respirations
Trace the arterial flow in the renals? renal arteries, segmental arteries, inter lobar arteries, accurate arteries, inter lobular arteries, renal parenchyma
The renal arteries enter the renal hilum and divide into? Segmental arteries
The segmental arteries branch into? Inter lobar arteries
Inter lobar arteries course around the renal pyramids giving rise to the ? Accurate arteries
The accurate arteries branch into the? Inter lobular arteries
What do the inter lobular arteries supply? Renal parenchyma
Trace the venous flow of the renals? Inter lobular v, arcuate v, inter lobar v, segmental v, renal v, IVC
What are the indications for having a renal vascular duplex exam? Suspected renal artery stenosis, renovascular HTN, vasospastic disease, serial exams after renal transplant.
What pt prep do you have to have for a renal exam? No 4-6 hrs
What transducer is utilized for a renal exam? 2.5-5 MHz
What is the protocol for a renal exam? Aorta, renal
What do obtain when you look at the aorta? Note any problems, obtain PSV prox mid and distal
What is the most important aortic PSV? PSV distal to SMA proximal renal artery origin
What should the Doppler angle be in a renal duplex exam? Less than 60
What do you obtain when you look at the renals? Document size of kidneys (lxwxh), measure cortical thickness
What is the average length of the kidneys? 10-12 cm
Should the both kidneys measure the Same? No, but they should be within 1 cm of each other
What is another name for the renal artery origin? Ostium
Where do you obtain the PSV and EDV in the renal parenchyma? Superior pole, inferior pole
What is the formula used to calculate the renal to aortic ratio (RAR)? Renal PSV/ Aortic PSV (needs to be less than 3.5 and calculate for both sides)
RAR < 3.5 0-59%
RAR > 3.5 60-90%
Renal values with aortic disease will present with what measurements? <180 cm/s negative for RAS, >180 cm/s positive for RAS
How do you calculate the Resistive Index for the renals? calculate from renal parenchyma waveform, psv-edv/psv
What are the guidelines for the RI in the renals? RI<.7= normal, RI greater than or equal to .7 abnormal
What is a common cause of HTN? Renal Artery Stenosis
What is the most important sonographic diagnostic tool? RAR
What test is used to definitively determine Renal Artery Stenosis? Angiography
If you are off 2 degrees over 60, how much % of error will you have? 10%
What is the purpose of evaluating parenchymal flow patterns? helps to evaluate intrinsic renal vascular disease when the entire renal artery can not be visualized
What will parenchymal disease result in? increase resistance to flow (End diastolic portion of the waveform will decrease as disease increases)
Where are doppler wave forms obtained for parenchymal flow? arcuate/ interlobular arteries
What is the second most common cause of renovascular HTN? Fibromuscular Dysplasia
What are some characterstics of fibromuscular dysplasia? increased velocities with normal wave forms due to constrictions and dilations
pt presents with pain and hematuria, and they have an enlarged, hypoechoic kidney Acute Renal Vein Thrombosis
pt is asymptomatic, and they have atrophic, hyperechoic kidney Chronic Renal Vein Thrombosis
known as a renal transplant Renal Allograft
The donor kidney is placed in the ______ anterior to the _____? iliac fossa, psoas muscle
In a Renal Allograft, where is the donor artery anastomosed? internal or external iliac artery
In a Renal Allograft, where is the Renal Vein anastamosed? internal iliac vein
What are some non-specific signs of allograft rejection? incease in renal size/volume, increase in cortical echogenicity and thickness, enlarged pyramids with low echogenicity, low echogenicity with renal sinus, hypoechoic areas within the renal parenchyma
How do you diagnose a Renal Allograft rejection? increased RI, RI of >.9 is 100% positive for rejection, RI <.7 is likely
After transplant, 25% of pts develop HTN Renal Artery Stenosis
Rare complication due to surgical technique Renal Artery Stenosis
Rare, biopsy is usually involved Pseudoaneurysm and AV fistula
What are 4 types of peritransplant fluid collections? Hematoma, Urinoma, Lymphocyte, Abscess
These are generally small and regress spontaneously, and they appear sonographically different depending on the age of the bleed. Hematoma
These commonly develop 1-2 weeks after transplant, and have a anechoic appearance that will increase in size Urinoma
These are the most common fluid collection that cause hydronephrosis, are a anechoic mass located medial to TX, and frequently contain septations lymphocyte
These take a few weeks to develop after surgery, and require drainage, and appear as irregular complex systic masses Abscess
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Dementia
Matthew Coulson
Evaluation of Arterial Bypass Grafts
ecmarchese
ABDOMINAL VASCULATURE
Elesa Zimmerly
Vascular
Korie Hi
Vascular
sophie_sophie899
Non-vascular (organisms?) From Foldable
R Yarla
Circulatory/Vascular System
Samantha Miseta
Leg Ulcers
Jenna Paterson
Vascular Sonography I and physics introduction
ecmarchese
Hemodialysis access grafts
ecmarchese
Vein and Artery Mapping
ecmarchese