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Contrast-enhanced CT imaging in patients with chronic kidney disease

Authors :
Tobias Penzkofer
Josef Ehling
Ruth Knüchel
Saskia von Stillfried
Peter Boor
Andreas H. Mahnken
Jonas Apitzsch
Jürgen Floege
Source :
Angiogenesis. 19:525-535
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Renal microvascular rarefaction characterizes chronic kidney disease (CKD). In murine models of CKD, micro-CT imaging reflected capillary rarefaction using quantification of renal relative blood volume (rBV). In addition, micro-CT imaging revealed morphological alterations of the intrarenal vasculature including reduced vascular branching and lumen diameter. Here, we retrospectively quantified rBV in contrast-enhanced CT angiography in patients and found that, compared to non-CKD patients, those with CKD and renal fibrosis had significantly reduced rBV in the renal cortex. rBV values closely mirrored capillary rarefaction in the corresponding nephrectomy specimens. In patients with follow-up CT angiography, reduction of renal function was paralleled by a decline in rBV. Using virtual autopsy, i.e., postmortem CT angiography, morphometry of intrarenal arteries in 3D-rendered CT images revealed significantly reduced arterial diameter and branching in CKD compared to non-CKD cases. In conclusion, in CKD patients, contrast-enhanced CT imaging with quantification of rBV correlates with functional renal vasculature, whereas virtual autopsy allows morphometric analyses of macrovascular changes. Importantly, the observed vascular alterations in CKD patients mirror those in animals with progressive CKD, suggesting a high relevance of animal models for studying vascular alterations in CKD and renal fibrosis.

Details

ISSN :
15737209 and 09696970
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Angiogenesis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f17ae20575ccbc1547626f0879dd422
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10456-016-9524-7