J Korean Med Sci.  2018 Sep;33(38):e236. 10.3346/jkms.2018.33.e236.

Clinical Usefulness of Unenhanced Computed Tomography in Patients with Acute Pyelonephritis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Korea. sejoong2@snu.ac.kr
  • 2Department of Radiology, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3Department of Radiology, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Unenhanced computed tomography (UCT) may be useful for evaluating acute pyelonephritis; however, no study has compared UCT with enhanced computed tomography (ECT) as a diagnostic tool. We evaluated a clinical usefulness of UCT versus ECT in acute pyelonephritis (APN).
METHODS
We reviewed the clinical and radiological data from 183 APN-suspected patients who underwent UCT and ECT simultaneously at emergency room (ER) over a two-year period. Demographic, clinical parameters and computed tomography (CT) parameters of 149 patients were compared.
RESULTS
The average patient age was 61.2 (± 10) years: 31 patients were men. Ninety-nine (66.4%) patients showed stones (18.7%), perinephric infiltration (56%), swelling (21%), and hydronephrosis (6.7%) on UCT. Seventeen patients (11.4%) had an atypical clinical course, requiring additional tests for accurate diagnosis. In 7 patients UCT and ECT results did not differ; in 10 patients, the diagnosis changed on ECT. On ECT, 112/149 (75.2%) patients had stones (16.7%), perinephric infiltrations (57%), swelling (21%), and hydronephrosis (6.7%); 62.5% showed parenchymal involvement: 34 (22.8%) patients had no abnormal ECT findings. APN CT findings are similar on stone, perinephric infiltration, swelling and hydronephrosis on both CTs. Twelve patients (8.0%) had an abnormal ECT finding, i.e., low-grade (1 and 2) parenchymal involvement. Six (4%) patients developed contrast-induced acute kidney injury within 2 days after ECT.
CONCLUSION
We demonstrate that UCT is not inferior to ECT as an initial tool for evaluating APN for screening nephrolithiasis and hydronephrosis without the risk of contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CIAKI). However, patients with an atypical clinical course may still need ECT.

Keyword

Acute Pyelonephritis; Unenhanced Computed Tomography; Parenchymal Involvement; Perinephric Infiltration; Contrast-induced Nephropathy

MeSH Terms

Acute Kidney Injury
Diagnosis
Emergency Service, Hospital
Humans
Hydronephrosis
Male
Mass Screening
Nephrolithiasis
Pyelonephritis*
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