URINARY Section 7: Transplant Vascular complications Flashcards
Doppler: Absent or almost totally absent cortical flow in the kidney (color or power Doppler)
Renal Allograft Compartment Syndrome (RACS)
Seen immediately - usually < 2 hours post transplantation
Renal Allograft Compartment Syndrome (RACS)
This is usually an operative complication where the kidney was too big for the pelvic extraperitoneal space they decided to jam it and when they stitch the fascia back up it puts the squeeze on the kidney. You can imagine if there was a fluid collection nearby that would make it worse
Renal Allograft Compartment Syndrome (RACS)
Seen immediately - usually < 2 hours post transplantation
Renal Allograft Compartment Syndrome (RACS)
is the main risk factor associated with RACS.
Large transplanted kidney (Transplant size matters)
Usually very early (mins to hours) as a post op complication (clamp injury etc…)
Renal Artery Thrombosis
Doppler: Flow is gone
Renal Artery Thrombosis
Grey Scale: Might see wedge shaped hypoechoic infarcts
Renal Artery Thrombosis
Depending on who you ask - like 30% of kids have graft failure because of this…
Renal Vein Thrombosis
Usually the first 5 days (peak at 48 hours)
Renal Vein Thrombosis
Doppler: Flow in the vein is gone. Reversed diastolic arterial flow.
Renal Vein Thrombosis
Grey Scale: Swollen / enlarged kidney.
Renal Vein Thrombosis
3 months - Two Years
Renal Artery Stenosis (RAS)
this is the most common vascular complication in a transplant.
Renal Artery Stenosis (RAS)
“hvpertension refractor/ to treatment”
Renal Artery Stenosis (RAS)