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Study of the renal segmental arterial anatomy with contrast-enhanced multi-detector computed tomography

Authors :
Francesco Rocco
Luigi Alberto Cozzi
Gabriele Cozzi
Source :
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy. 37:517-526
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.

Abstract

To use triphasic multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) to study the renal segmental arterial anatomy and its relationship with the urinary tract to plan nephron-sparing surgery (NSS).One hundred and fifty nine patients underwent abdominal contrast-enhanced MDCT. We evaluated renal arteries and parenchymal vasculature. In 61 patients, the arteries and the urinary tract were represented simultaneously.86.60% presented a single renal artery; 13.4%, multiple arteries. All single renal arteries divided into anterior and posterior branch before the hilum. The anterior artery branched into a superior, middle, and inferior branch. In 43.14%, the inferior artery arose before the others; in 45.75%, the superior artery arose before the others; in 9.80%, the branches shared a common trunk. In 26.80%, the posterior artery supplies the entire posterior surface; in 73.20%, it ends along the inferior calyx. In 96.73%, the upper pole was vascularized by the anterior superior branch and the posterior artery: the "tuning fork". MDCT showed four vascular segments in 96.73% and five in 3.27%. MDCT showed two avascular areas: the first along the projection of the inferior calyx on the posterior aspect, the second between the branches of the "tuning fork".The arterial phase provides the arterial tree representation; the delayed phase shows arteries and urinary tract simultaneously. MDCT provides a useful representation of the renal anatomy prior to intervascular-intrarenal NSS.

Details

ISSN :
12798517 and 09301038
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....29d97d41cae09bbe7093ed85ca922925