Chapter 8 Selected Diseases and Disorders of the Urinary System
Advanced Diagnostic Tests for Kidney and Urinary System
Zoë Soon
Advanced Diagnostic Tests for Kidney and Urinary System
1. Imaging Techniques:
- Pyelogram: Uses radiodense dye injected into the urinary tract.
- X-ray imaging highlights ureters, bladder, and renal pelvis.
- Detects structural abnormalities, blockages, or anomalies.
- Other imaging modalities:
- Ultrasound: Detects structural abnormalities, obstructions, masses, cysts, stones.
- CT or MRI: Provides detailed images of anatomy and kidney size.
- Can assess blood flow and filtration patterns.
- Angiography:
- Injects dye into blood vessels. Highlights vascular abnormalities or blockages.
2. Clearance Tests and GFR Calculation:
- Measure renal function by evaluating how well wastes are cleared from the blood.
- Comparing blood levels of waste products with urine levels:
- Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN) vs. urinary urea.
- Creatinine vs. urinary creatinine.
- Cystatin C:
- Produced by all cells, not just muscle.
- Less dependent on muscle mass, providing a more uniform indicator of glomerular filtration rate.
- Inulin clearance: The gold standard to measure GFR.
- Involves injecting inulin (small, inert molecule that passes through the glomeruli without being reabsorbed by the nephron); the clearance rate indicates kidney filtration efficiency.
- More expensive and complex; commonly replaced by creatinine measurements.
- Additional Procedures:
- Cystoscopy:
- Visual examination of the bladder via a cystoscope. Can diagnose tumors, infections.
- Used to remove kidney stones. Can also perform biopsies for microscopic evaluation of tissue.
Summary:
Diagnostic tools include imaging (pyelogram, ultrasound, CT, MRI, angiography), functional tests (BUN, creatinine, cystatin C, inulin clearance), and invasive assessments like cystoscopy. These evaluations help identify structural abnormalities, assess kidneys’ filtering capacity, and diagnose tumors or infections for appropriate intervention. Accurate assessment of GFR is vital to detect declining kidney function early.