Abstract

AbstractDiagnosis of acute renal infarction is often delayed or missed due to both the rarity of the disease and its unespecific clinical presentationDefinitive radiologic diagnosis often requires invasive procedures such as angiography. Computed tomography (CT) may be useful in diagnosing acute renal infarction and is considered the standard of reference for diagnosis of acute renal infarction, with the advantage of being non-invasive and potentially available 24 hours a dayWe report two cases, in the first case we show a segmentary renal infarction; at the second one we report a case of complete renal infarctionPresentation, diagnosis and therapeutic aspects are discused

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