Abstract

To determine whether years since injury, level of injury, degree of injury, gender, or age influence renal function in 66 spinal cord injuries (SCI) patients without urological complications, individual kidney effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) and radionuclide renogram (RR) were measured using technetium-99m mercaptoacetyltriglycine (Tc-99m MAG3). The 176 individual kidneys included 84 kidneys with normal ERPF and RR, 48 kidneys with normal ERPF but abnormal RR, and 44 kidneys with abnormal ERPF and RR. The incidence of abnormal Tc-99m renal study results was higher in the kidneys of female patients (37/54, 68%) than of male patients (55/122, 45%) (p < 0.05). We found that Tc-99m MAG3 renal studies including ERPF and RR are safe and noninvasive urological screening tests for SCI patients.

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