Imaging of urinary tract
Preijo Sidipratomo
What is the urinary tract?
• The urinary tract is your body’s
  drainage system for removing
  wastes and extra fluids. The urinary
  tract includes two kidneys, two
  ureters, a bladder, and a urethra.
• The kidneys filter wastes and fluids
  to produce urine. The urine travels
  from the kidneys down two narrow
  tubes called the ureters. The urine
  is then stored in a hollow, muscular,
  balloon-shaped organ called the
  bladder. When the bladder
  empties, urine flows out of the
  body through a tube called the
  urethra at the bottom of the
  bladder.
What does “imaging” mean?
• Imaging is a general term for techniques used to create pictures.
• In medicine, imaging produces pictures of bones, organs, and vessels
  inside the body. Imaging helps health care professionals see the cause
  of medical problems.
The radiological examinations of the urinary
tract are
• 1. x-rays
• Intravenous urography (IVU).
• 2.Ultrasound.
• 3. Computed tomography(CT) .
•  4.Radionuclide examinations.(radio nuclid scan)
•  5. Magneticresonance imaging (MRI).
•  6. Arteriography .
•  7. Studies requiring catheterization or direct puncture of the collecting
  systems.
• The last three examination are limited to selected cases
Imaging technique Ultrasound
• To investigate patients with symptoms thought to arise from the
urinary tract.
• To demonstrate the size of the kidneys and exclude hydronephrosis in
patients with renal failure.
• To diagnose hydronephrosis, renal tumours, abscesses and cysts
including polycystic disease.
• To assess and follow-up renal size and scarring in children with
urinary tract infections.
• To assess the bladder and prostate
• Normal renal ultrasound
• At ultrasound, the
  kidneys should be
  smooth in outline. The
  parenchyma surrounds a
  central echo-dense
  region, known as the
  central echo complex
  (the renal sinus),
  consisting of the
  pelvicaliceal system,
  together with the
  surrounding fat and
  renal blood vessels
• Normal ureters are not
  usually visualized due to
  overlying bowel gas.
• The urinary bladder
  should be examined in
  the distended state: the
  walls should be sharply
  defined and barely
  perceptible .The bladder
  may also be assessed
  following micturition, to
  measure the post
  micturition residual
  volume of urine.
Urography
• Urography is the term used to describe the imaging of the renal tract
  using intravenous iodinated contrast medium.
• There are 2 types :
• 1.The traditional intravenous urogram ( IVU )
• 2. CT urography .
• CT has the advantage of being highly sensitive for the detection of stones,
  including those that may be radiolucent on plain film, allows the
  characterization of renal lesions and the detection of ureteric lesions, and
  demonstrates the surrounding retroperitoneal and abdominal tissues. In
  addition , CT overcomes the overlap of superimposed tissues, which can
  cause difficulty when interpreting traditional IVU.
• The principles of both techniques are similar. Firstly, ‘non-contrast’
  imaging of the renal tract is required, in order to identify all renal tract
  calcifications. In some case, where the clinical question relates to renal
  calculi, the non contrast CT may be sufficient (known as the ‘CT KUB’).
The main indications for urography are:
IVU study
• -Plain film in intravenous urogram: it used to Identify all calcifications.
  Decide if they are in the kidneys by relating them to the renal outlines
  , calcification seen in the line of the ureters or bladder must be
  reviewed with post contrast scans, to determine whether the
  calcification lies in the renal tract. Note that calcification can be
  obscured by contrast medium and stones are missed if no plain film is
  taken
.Check that the kidneys are in
their normal positions . The left
kidney is usually higher than the
right.
pelvis and ureters
Bladder
• The bladder is a centrally located structure that should have a smooth
  outline. It often shows normal smooth indentations from above
  owing to the uterus or the sigmoid colon, and from below by muscles
  of the pelvic floor .
• After micturition the bladder should
• be empty, apart from a little contrast
• trapped in the folded mucosa
Computed tomography urography
• CT is initially performed without intravnous contrast medium (non-
  contrast CT or ‘CT KUB’) to identify calcification
Computed tomography urography
indication and include:
• (i) The early renal cortical enhancement phase.
• (ii) The homogeneous nephrogramphase; and
• (iii)The delayed urographic phase, obtained
• several minutes later to demonstrate contrast within the collecting
  systems.
Magnetic resonance imaging
• Magnetic resonance imaging gives similar anatomical information to CT,
  with the advantage of being able to obtain scans directly in multiple
  planes. It is generally used in selected circumstances , including :
• -To demonstrate renal artery stenosis .
• - Inferior vena caval extension of renal tumours.
• - To clarify problems not solved by ultrasound or CT.
• -To assess the extent of bladder or prostate cancer prior to consideration
  for surgery.
• Calcification is not visible on MRI, which is one of the main disadvantages
  of the technique for renal tract imaging
Normal magnetic resonance imaging
• As with CT and
  ultrasound, the renal
  contours should be
  smooth.
  Corticomedullary
  differentiation is best
  seen on T1-weighted
  images and
  immediately following
  intravenous contrast
  enhancement with
  gadolinium .
• The renal
  collecting
  systems,
  ureters and
  bladder are
  best seen on
  T2-weighted
  images, as the
  fluid returns a
  high signal
  intensity
Special techniques
• Retrograde and antegrade pyelography
• The techniques of retrograde and antegrade pyelography (the term
  pyelography means demonstrating the pelvicaliceal system and ureters)
  involve direct injection of contrast material into the pelvicaliceal system or
  ureters through catheters placed via cystoscopy (retrograde pyelography)
  or percutaneously into the kidney via the loin (antegrade pyelography).
• The indications are limited to those situationswhere the information
  cannot be achieved by less invasive means, e.g. IVU, CT or MRI to confirm a
  possible transitional cell carcinoma in the renal pelvis or ureter.
Voiding cystourethrogram (micturating
cystogram) and videourodynamics
• In voiding
  cystourethrography, the
  bladder is filled with
  iodinated contrast medium
  through a catheter and films
  are taken during voiding. The
  entire process is observed
  fluoroscopically to identify
  vesicoureteric reflux.
• The bladder and urethra can
• be assessed during voiding
• to demonstrate strictures or
• urethral valves .
Urethrography
• The urethra is visualized during
  voiding cystourethrography.For
  full visualization of the male
  urethra, however, an ascending
  urethrogram with contrast
  medium injection via the external
  urethral meatus is necessary .
• The usual indications for the
  examination are:
• - The identificationof urethral
  strictures
• - To demonstrate extravasation
  from
• the urethra or bladder neck
• following trauma
Radionuclide scans
• A radionuclide scan, also called a nuclear scan or radioisotope scan,
  detects small amounts of radiation after radioactive material is
  injected into the blood. This scan provides information about how
  your kidneys function and helps health care professionals diagnose
  many conditions, including cancers, injuries, and infections.
• Renal scan, also called kidney scan. Your health care professional
  might use a renal scan to check your kidneys and the urinary system.
  This type of exam includes injecting a small amount of radioactive
  material into the blood and using a special camera and computer.
• There are different types of renal scans, and they can be used to check the
  kidneys along with other imaging methods such as ultrasound, CT scans,
  and MRIs. Sometimes they can provide unique information that is hard to
  get from other imaging procedures. A health care professional determines
  which method will provide the best information about your kidneys and
  urinary system.
• PET scan .
• A positron emission tomography (PET) scan is a type of imaging that uses a
  small amount of radioactive material, a special camera, and a computer to
  help health care professionals see how the organs and tissues are working.
  PET scans are sometimes performed on combined PET/CT scanners
• Ca.
  ginjal
  metat
  asis
Renal arteriography
• Renal arteriography is
  performed via a
  catheter introduced
  into the femoral artery
  by the Seldinger
  technique . Selective
  injection are made into
  one or both renal
  arteries . It is mainly
  used:
• - To confirm the CT or
  MRI findings of vascular
  anatomy prior to renal
  surgery.
• -To confirm renal
  artery stenosis prior to
  percutaneous balloon
  angioplasty
• Left renal
  artery
  stenosis
literatures
• https://www.muhadharaty.com/lecture/
• https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/diagnostic-
  tests/urinary-tract-imaging