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Case 47 - Pseudocalculi due to excreted gadolinium

from Section 7 - Kidneys

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

Fergus V. Coakley
Affiliation:
University of California, San Francisco
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Summary

Imaging description

Gadolinium is a rare-earth metal used as an MRI contrast agent because of its paramagnetic properties. Gadolinium has a high atomic number (64, compared to 53 for iodine) and absorbs x-rays, and so functionally can act as a radiographic contrast agent. Before the recognition of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis as a complication of gadolinium administration in patients with renal failure, gadolinium was advocated as an angiographic contrast agent for such patients [1,2]. Like iodinated contrast, gadolinium is excreted by the kidneys. Concentrated excreted gadolinium is radiodense within the collecting system at CT [3, 4], and this radiodensity can mimic renal calculi when non-enhanced CT is performed within the first few hours after a gadolinium-enhanced MRI study (Figure 47.1) [4, 5]. The phenomenon has not been extensively studied, but limited data suggest the dense appearance of excreted gadolinium at CT in the collecting systems is variable from patient to patient, and cannot be reliably predicted from the time interval since gadolinium administration, patient weight, or simple indices of renal function [4].

Importance

Misdiagnosis of excreted gadolinium as renal calculi can result in unnecessary additional investigations, such as abdominal radiography or intravenous pyelography [5].

Typical clinical scenario

Pseudocalculi due to excreted gadolinium can be seen in any patient who undergoes non-enhanced abdominal CT after a gadolinium-enhanced MRI.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Abdominal Imaging
Pseudotumors, Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 158 - 159
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Spinosa, DJ, Matsumoto, AH, Angle, JF, et al. Renal insufficiency: usefulness of gadodiamide-enhanced renal angiography to supplement CO2-enhanced renal angiography for diagnosis and percutaneous treatment. Radiology 1999; 210: 663–672.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Slaba, SG, El-Hajj, LF, Abboud, GA, Gebara, VA. Selective angiography of cerebral aneurysm using gadodiamide in polycystic kidney disease with renal insufficiency. Am J Roentgenol 2000; 175: 1467–1468.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bloem, JL, Wondergem, J. Gd-DTPA as a contrast agent in CT. Radiology 1989; 171: 578–579.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gibson, RJ, Meanock, CI, Torrie, EP, Walker, TM. An assessment of Gd-DTPA as a CT contrast agent in the renal tract. Clin Radiol 1993; 47: 278–279.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Donnelly, LF, Nelson, RC. Renal excretion of gadolinium mimicking calculi on non-contrast CT. Pediatr Radiol 1998; 28: 417.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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