Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of duplex ultrasound for the diagnosis of renovascular disease in a cohort of hypertensive patients. In 78 patients suspected of renovascular hypertension on clinical grounds duplex ultrasound examination of the renal arteries was performed. Renal angiography was used as the standard of reference. Duplex ultrasound was inconclusive in 11 kidneys (7%). None of the supernumerary renal arteries was detected with duplex ultrasound. The overall prevalence of significant renovascular disease (> or =50% stenosis) was 20%. Based on the combination of parameters at thresholds commonly applied in current literature: ie PSV(max) >180 cm/sec and RAR >3.5 the overall sensitivity of duplex ultrasound for detection of haemodynamically significant renovascular disease was 50.0% with a specificity of 91.3% (PPV: 87.9%; NPV: 59.1). Lowering the thresholds for both parameters improved the test results at the cost of a significant increase of false positive examinations. In a population of hypertensive patients clinically suspected of renovascular hypertension, only limited results for duplex ultrasound could be acquired in the detection of renovascular disease. This result, in combination with the wide range of sensitivities and specificities published in international literature and the relatively large number of incomplete examinations does not support the general application of duplex ultrasound as a screening procedure for detection and assessment of renovascular disease.

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