Late evaluation of the relationship between morphological and functional renal changes and hypertension after non-operative treatment of high-grade renal injuries


Autoria(s): Pereira Junior, Gerson Alves; Muglia, Valdair Francisco; Santos, Antonio Carlos dos; Miyake, Cecilia Hissae; Nobre, Fernando; Kato, Mery; Simões, Marcus Vinícius; Andrade, José Ivan de
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

14/10/2013

14/10/2013

2012

Resumo

Objective: To evaluate the anatomical and functional renal alterations and the association with post-traumatic arterial hypertension. Methods: The studied population included patients who sustained high grades renal injury (grades III to V) successfully non-operative management after staging by computed tomography over a 16-year period. Beyond the review of medical records, these patients were invited to the following protocol: clinical and laboratory evaluation, abdominal computed tomography, magnetic resonance angiography, DMSA renal scintigraphy, and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. The hypertensive patients also were submitted to dynamic renal scintigraphy (Tc-99m EC), using captopril stimulation to verify renal vascular etiology. Results: Of the 31 patients, there were thirteen grade III, sixteen grade IV (nine lacerations, and seven vascular lesions), and two grade V injuries. All the patients were asymptomatic and an average follow up post-injury of 6.4 years. None had abnormal BUN or seric creatinine. The percentage of renal volume reduction correlates with the severity as defined by OIS. There was no evidence of renal artery stenosis in Magnetic Resonance angiography (MRA). DMSA scanning demonstrated a decline in percentage of total renal function corresponding to injury severity (42.2 +/- 5.5% for grade III, 35.3 +/- 12.8% for grade IV, 13.5 +/- 19.1 for grade V). Six patients (19.4%) had severe compromised function (< 30%). There was statistically significant difference in the decrease in renal function between parenchymal and vascular causes for grade IV injuries (p < 0.001). The 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring detected nine patients (29%) with post-traumatic hypertension. All the patients were male, mean 35.6 years, 77.8 % had a familial history of arterial hypertension, 66.7% had grade III renal injury, and average post-injury time was 7.8 years. Seven patients had negative captopril renography. Conclusions: Late results of renal function after conservative treatment of high grades renal injuries are favorable, except for patients with grades IV with vascular injuries and grade V renal injuries. Moreover, arterial hypertension does not correlate with the grade of renal injury or reduction of renal function.

Identificador

WORLD JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SURGERY, LONDON, v. 7, AUG 1, 2012

1749-7922

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/34482

10.1186/1749-7922-7-26

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1749-7922-7-26

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD

LONDON

Relação

WORLD JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SURGERY

Direitos

openAccess

Copyright BIOMED CENTRAL LTD

Palavras-Chave #RENAL INJURY #CONSERVATIVE MANAGEMENT #FOLLOW-UP IMAGING #RENAL FUNCTION #RADIONUCLIDE IMAGING #DIMERCAPTOSUCCINIC ACID #COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY #MAGNETIC RESONANCE ANGIOGRAPHY #RENAL HYPERTENSION #RENOVASCULAR HYPERTENSION #ARTERIAL-HYPERTENSION #AMERICAN-ASSOCIATION #TRAUMA #CHILDREN #SCINTIGRAPHY #MANAGEMENT #KIDNEY #RECONSTRUCTION #SECONDARY #EMERGENCY MEDICINE #SURGERY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion