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Acute allograft dysfunction is often observed in the first weeks after kidney transplantation. Renal biopsy is universally considered the gold standard procedure for differential diagnosis of acute allograft dysfunction secondary to intraparenchymal causes. Kidney biopsy, however, is an invasive procedure that is time and cost consuming. Moreover, it may but not contribute to clinical diagnosis in about 10% of cases because of the impossibility to perform the analysis or of inadequacy of the biopsy sample. Availability or readily applicable non-invasive procedures might therefore allow increasing the performance of differential diagnosis of allograft dysfunction. In the recent years, a novel US imaging technique, namely contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CE-US),has been developed. The agent used in this study, Sonovue microbubbles consist of a central sulphur hexafluoride core with a surrounding phospholipid monolayer and last for several minutes in the systemic circulation before spontaneous degradation with absorption of the gaseous component by the lungs and the phospholipid shell by the liver. With the use of gasfilled microbubbles that act as scatterers within the blood stream and the development of low-MI ultrasound techniques that allow the visualization of the bubbles without destroying them, it is possible to improve the depiction of vessels and have access to structural and functional information on the microcirculation. Moreover SonoVue microbubbles are not nephrotoxic and can be safely used to evaluate kidney disfunction.
Thus, whether a. different patterns of parenchymal perfusion detected by CE-US can be associated with different patterns of renal graft involvement during acute renal function deterioration and b. whether, conversely, different patterns of parenchymal perfusion detected by CE-US may help predicting different patterns of renal involvement will be investigated in 20 deceased or living donor kidney graft recipients.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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