학술논문

The quantification of renal function with enhanced computed tomography
Document Type
Article
Source
The British Journal of Radiology; November 1996, Vol. 69 Issue: 827 p989-995, 7p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00071285; 1748880X
Abstract
The changes with time in renal parenchymal and vascular attenuation following injection of an intravascular contrast medium can be exploited to study renal physiology in several ways. Shortly after injection, both contrast medium clearance and fractional vascular volume per unit volume of kidney can be measured on a regional basis by obtaining sequential CT data from one anatomical level and the application of a graphical analysis to the baseline subtracted CT numbers for tissue and vascular regions of interest: c(t) and b(t), respectively. By plotting the ratio c(t)/b(t) against ∫b(t)dt/b(t), both fractional vascular volume and contrast medium clearance can be estimated graphically. At later time points, a semilogarithmic plot against time of the declining attenuation of vascular or parenchymal regions of interest gives information about overall, as opposed to regional, renal function: the gradient estimates the glomerular filtration rate per unit volume of extracellular fluid. Absolute glomerular filtration rates can also be calculated with blood sampling. Although further experimental evaluation is needed, these techniques have a strong theoretical basis, and experimental work performed so far is encouraging. Possible applications of these techniques are discussed.