Ultrasound Patterns and Disease Progression in Medullary Sponge Kidney in Adults

Author:

Gliga Mirela Liana123ORCID,Chirila Cristian12ORCID,Chirila Paula Maria4

Affiliation:

1. Nephrology Department, Mures Clinical County Hospital, Targu Mures, Romania

2. George Emil Palade University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science and Technology, Targu Mures, Romania

3. Diaverum Dialysis Center, Targu Mures, Romania

4. Endocrinology Department, Mures Clinical County Hospital, Targu Mures, Romania

Abstract

Our paper presents the ultrasound (US) patterns of a rare kidney disease—medullary sponge kidney (MSK)—that have not been described before in comparison with other causes of medullary hyperechogenicity and correlates them with the severity of the disease and prognosis. This is a clinical observational study of all US examinations in the Nephrology Department over a period of 6 years. The abdominal US focused on the kidneys was recorded. US characteristics of the medulla and cortex were analyzed. We found 10 patients with characteristic daisy flower (DF) kidneys. Positive diagnosis in association with other renal risk factors, prognosis, and evolution were evaluated. Two patterns of medullary hyperechogenicity were found and were correlated with disease severity and kidney function. The first pattern is a homogenous echogenicity of the medulla described as a “daisy-like” appearance. The second pattern: calcifications associated with medullar echogenicity, stone production, nephrocalcinosis, and impaired kidney function: “atypical daisy-like.” Medullary hyperechogenicity can have more US patterns. In MSK, if the medullary echogenicity is homogenous the evolution is benign, whereas the second, inhomogeneous pattern, has a variable clinical presentation with nephrocalcinosis and the outcome is more severe, leading to chronic kidney disease and impairing the quality of life.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

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