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Radiology, Vol 207, 377-384, Copyright © 1998 by Radiological Society of North America


ARTICLES

Childhood pyelonephritis: comparison of gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging and renal cortical scintigraphy for diagnosis

GJ Lonergan, DJ Pennington, JC Morrison, RM Haws, MS Grimley and TC Kao
Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex., USA.

PURPOSE: To compare gadolinium-enhanced inversion-recovery magnetic resonance (MR) imaging with renal cortical scintigraphy in the diagnosis of childhood pyelonephritis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty- seven patients with fever-producing urinary tract infection underwent gadolinium-enhanced inversion-recovery MR imaging and technetium-99m renal cortical scintigraphy. Each study was read in double-blind fashion by two radiologists. The kidney was divided into three zones, and each was graded as positive, equivocal, or negative for pyelonephritis. RESULTS: Seventy kidneys (210 zones) were imaged. Twenty-six kidneys (54 zones) had evidence of pyelonephritis at both MR imaging and scintigraphy. Twenty-four kidneys (100 zones) were negative on both studies. Twelve kidneys (42 zones) were positive at MR imaging but negative at scintigraphy, and four kidneys (seven zones) were negative at MR imaging but positive at scintigraphy. The results of MR imaging for pyelonephritis were not equivalent to the results of scintigraphy (P = .001 for renal zones). The proportion of positive agreement between readers for the presence of pyelonephritis was 0.85 and 0.57 for MR imaging and scintigraphy, respectively. The proportion of negative agreement was 0.88 and 0.80 for MR imaging and scintigraphy, respectively. CONCLUSION: Gadolinium-enhanced inversion- recovery MR imaging enabled detection of more pyelonephritic lesions than did renal cortical scintigraphy and had superior interobserver agreement.


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