Published in:
01-11-2012 | Brief Report
Renal artery revascularisation can restore kidney function with absent radiotracer uptake
Authors:
Yincent Tse, Stephen D. Marks, Eileen Brennan, George Hamilton, Clare A. McLaren, Derek J. Roebuck, Kjell Tullus
Published in:
Pediatric Nephrology
|
Issue 11/2012
Login to get access
Abstract
Background
Children with renovascular hypertension often present with severe hypertension. Some children have severe obstruction of their renal arteries resulting in <10% relative function on [99mTc]dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan. Conventional treatment of these children has been nephrectomy of the poorly functioning kidney to normalise their blood pressure (BP).
Case-Diagnosis/treatment
We describe three children aged 20 months to 9 years with severe renal artery stenosis and severe hypertension who had radionucleotide uptake of 0% in one kidney. In one case, no renal perfusion was demonstrated by duplex ultrasound scan. Significant recovery of relative renal function of 18 to 52% was achieved after revascularisation by percutaneous angioplasty or open surgery of the obstructed renal artery.
Conclusion
These cases illustrate that scintigraphy alone cannot be used to predict salvageable function in children with renovascular disease.