Imaging in Renal Evaluation
Renal imaging is central to diagnosing AKI, CKD, obstruction, stones, vascular disease, infection, trauma, and tumors.
1️⃣ Ultrasound (USG) – First-Line Modality
A. Kidney Size
|
Finding |
Interpretation |
|
9–12 cm |
Normal adult |
|
< 9 cm |
Chronic kidney disease |
|
Enlarged kidneys |
AKI, obstruction, diabetes, amyloidosis, lymphoma, HIV nephropathy |
High-yield:
Small kidneys + increased echogenicity = irreversible CKD
B. Cortical Thickness
Normal: 7–10 mm
Reduced thickness → chronicity marker
C. Echogenicity
- Normally cortex < liver/spleen
- Increased echogenicity → CKD
D. Hydronephrosis
Grading:
- Mild: Pelvicalyceal dilation only
- Moderate: Calyceal ballooning
- Severe: Cortical thinning
⚠ Exam pearl:USG may miss early obstruction (<24h)
E. Stones
- Hyperechoic focus
- Posterior acoustic shadow
Sensitivity less than CT.
F. Cysts
- Simple cyst: Thin wall, anechoic, posterior enhancement
- Complex cyst → requires CT characterization
2️⃣ Doppler Ultrasound
Indications
- Suspected renal artery stenosis
- Renal vein thrombosis
- Transplant kidney evaluation
- Unexplained AKI
Renal Resistive Index (RI)
RI = (Peak systolic velocity − End diastolic velocity) / Peak systolic velocity
Normal: < 0.7
0.8 → intrinsic renal disease
Renal Artery Stenosis Clues
- PSV > 180–200 cm/s
- Post-stenotic turbulence
- Kidney asymmetry
3️⃣ Non-Contrast CT (NCCT)
Gold Standard for:
➜ Urolithiasis
Sensitivity ~95–100%
Detects:
- Stone size
- Location
- Obstruction
- Secondary signs (hydroureter)
⚠ Does NOT assess function
4️⃣ Contrast-Enhanced CT (CECT)
Phases:
- Non-contrast
- Corticomedullary phase
- Nephrographic phase
- Excretory phase
Indications
A. Renal Tumor Evaluation
- Enhancement > 15–20 HU → solid tumor
- Staging
B. Pyelonephritis
- Striated nephrogram
- Abscess detection
C. Renal Trauma
- Laceration
- Hematoma
- Urine leak
D. Complicated UTI
5️⃣ CT Angiography (CTA)
Indications:
- Renal artery stenosis
- Aneurysm
- Dissection
- Fibromuscular dysplasia
High spatial resolution
6️⃣ MRI & MR Angiography
Advantages
- No radiation
- Excellent soft tissue contrast
- Alternative when iodinated contrast contraindicated
Gadolinium Risk
⚠ Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) in severe CKD
Avoid if:
- eGFR < 30
7️⃣ Nuclear Medicine Scans
A. DTPA Scan(Diethylene Triamine Pentaacetic Acid Renography) Scan-Technetium-99m DTPA
- Cleared by: Glomerular filtration only
- NOT secreted or reabsorbed
- Measures GFR
B. MAG3 Renogram(Technetium-99m MAG3)
(Mercaptoacetyltriglycine Renography
- Tubular function,Cleared by: Tubular secretion
- Obstruction assessment
C. DMSA(Dimercaptosuccinic Acid Scan)
Binds to: Proximal tubular cortical cells
- Cortical scarring
- Reflux nephropathy (pediatrics)
8️⃣ Imaging in Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)
First test → Ultrasound
Look for:
- Obstruction
- Kidney size
- Parenchymal disease
CT only if:
- Stones suspected
- Complicated infection
- Trauma
9️⃣ Imaging in CKD
Typical USG findings:
- Small kidneys
- Increased echogenicity
- Cortical thinning
Large kidneys in CKD:
- Diabetes
- Amyloidosis
- Polycystic kidney disease
🔟 Imaging in Renal Transplant
USG + Doppler = first-line
Assess:
- Perfusion
- Arterial stenosis
- Perinephric collection
- Rejection suspicion
RI > 0.9 → poor prognosis
1️⃣1️⃣ Imaging in Specific Conditions
|
Condition |
Best Imaging |
|
Renal stone |
NCCT |
|
Renal tumor |
CECT |
|
Renal artery stenosis |
Doppler → CTA |
|
Pyelonephritis |
CECT |
|
Trauma |
CECT |
|
Obstruction |
USG ± CT |
|
Renal vein thrombosis |
Doppler / MRI |
1️⃣2️⃣ Imaging Algorithm
Step 1: AKI?
→ Ultrasound
Step 2: Obstruction?
→ Yes → CT if unclear
Step 3: Stone?
→ NCCT
Step 4: Mass?
→ CECT
Step 5: Vascular?
→ Doppler → CTA/MRA

