The relative function of the obstructed kidney (RFOK) was assessed in 43 adult patients with upper urinary tract obstruction (UUTO) using 99mTc-DTPA and 131I-ortho-iodohippurate (OIH) dynamic studies and 99mTc-DMSA dynamic and static studies. The patients were divided into five groups according to the duration and degree of obstruction. Findings were as follows: a) in patients with the first occurrence of acute severe obstruction (group 1), the relative glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was significantly less than the relative effective renal plasma flow (ERPF); b) in patients with chronic severe obstruction and long term uroinfection, the relative ERPF decreased significantly compared with the relative GFR; c) the RFOK calculated from the DMSA dynamic study was the same as both the relative GFR or ERPF in any group; d) the RFOK calculated from the DMSA static study seemed to parallel the relative ERPF more closely than the relative GFR, but in group one it was significantly higher than any of three other estimates. It is concluded that 99mTc-DTPA is the radiopharmaceutical of choice in obstructive uronephropathy, but when interpreting the RFOK, the time course and severity of obstruction, the presence or absence of uroinfection should also be considered.
Dysfunction of a transplanted kidney may develop at any time in the post-transplant period. The aim of this study was to differentiate levels of early dysfunction of a transplanted kidney. The study included 45 examinees undergoing kidney transplantation. They were divided into four groups, in regard to length of hospitalization and post-transplant complications: group I (up to 15 days, complication-free); group II (up to 15 days, with complications); group III (up to 30 days); group IV (up to 60 days). The control group included patients undergoing abdominal surgery, without uropoetic system disorders. The following parameters were examined on a daily basis a month after transplantation on average: creatinine clearance, creatinine and urea. Statistical analysis of these parameters revealed the following levels of renal dysfunction: control group--circulatory tubular dysfunction without azotemia; group I--polyuric acute tubular necrosis; group II and group III--severe or moderately severe polyuric acute tubular necrosis and group IV--polyuric acute tubular necrosis.
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