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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of renal artery stenosis: experimental and clinical analysis of velocity waveforms.

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TLDR
Velocity waveform analysis can accurately detect renal artery stenosis and may prove effective in mass screening of hypertensive patients for renovascular disease.
Abstract
Mass screening of hypertensive patients by a noninvasive method could uncover the 10% of those cases where renal artery stenosis is the primary etiology. Treatment by transluminal angioplasty or surgery could replace a long-term medical regimen. To investigate an ultrasonic technique, normal velocity waveforms were obtained from the abdominal aorta, celiac artery and renal arteries in seven mongrel dogs using a 5 MHz, continuous-wave Doppler detector. Renal artery pressure gradients, volume flow rates and velocity recordings were subsequently made during induced proximal renal artery stenoses. The ratio of peak renal artery frequency to peak aortic frequency was 88% sensitive to stenoses of >20 mm Hg pressure gradient, while the renal artery systolic frequency window was 79% sensitive to the same obstructions. Ninety-five hypertensive and vascular surgical patients were examined using a 3 MHz duplex scanner with 175 of the 190 (92%) renal arteries adequately detected (clear signal with high diastolic component). Analysis of velocity waveforms based on peak frequency, proximal to distal peak frequency changes, evidence of flow disturbances and associated bruit were compared to contrast arteriograms in 84 vessels. Of the 76 (90%) arteries adequately examined by duplex scanning, 59 of 61 (97%) with 0–59% diameter reduction, 10 of 12 (83%) with 60–99% diameter reduction and 1 of 3 (33%) occlusions were correctly identified. Velocity waveform analysis can accurately detect renal artery stenosis and may prove effective in mass screening of hypertensive patients for renovascular disease.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Renal duplex sonography : evaluation of clinical utility

TL;DR: It is concluded that renal duplex sonography can be a valuable screening test in the search for correctable renovascular disease causing global renal ischemia and secondary renal insufficiency (ischemic nephropathy) nor does it predict hypertension or renal function response after correction of renov vascular disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive diagnosis of renal artery stenosis by ultrasonic duplex scanning

TL;DR: The ratio of the end-diastolic to peak systolic velocities in the renal artery (EDR) tended to decrease with increasing serum creatinine levels, presumably because renal vascular resistance increases with end-stage parenchymal disease, and may prove useful in the detection of advanced parenchymal disease before renal artery revascularization is attempted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of duplex scanning for the detection of atherosclerotic renal artery disease

TL;DR: Since duplex scanning can accurately demonstrate and locate focal renal artery stenosis, it may become an accurate screening test for renovascular hypertension and be able to discriminate normal from diseased renal arteries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative accuracy of renal duplex sonographic parameters in the diagnosis of renal artery stenosis: paired and unpaired analysis.

TL;DR: Sonography is a moderately accurate screening test for renal artery stenosis and has the highest performance characteristics, an expected sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 92%.
Journal ArticleDOI

New insights into the epidemiologic and clinical manifestations of atherosclerotic renovascular disease.

TL;DR: Large-scale trials that will identify the optimal approach to improving renal functional and survival outcomes in this high-risk group of patients are now long overdue.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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