Abstract

The causes of early renal allograft malfunction include rejection, acute tubular necrosis, cyclosporin nephrotoxicity and vascular complications. Fine-needle intrarenal manometry is a potential method of distinguishing rejection from the other causes of malfunction and has been used by Salaman and Griffin in patients' treated with cyclosporin. The technique involves inserting a fine-needle, which is connected to a specially designed manometer, into the substance of the transplant kidney. One hundred and six measurements of intrarenal pressure have been made in 28 patients immunosuppressed with either azathioprine and prednisolone or cyclosporin. Thirteen rejection episodes were identified and confirmed by biopsy. These were treated by pulse steroid (methylprednisolone) therapy. Seven episodes of cyclosporin toxicity were identified and there were fifteen episodes of acute tubular necrosis. The mean intrarenal pressure in the rejecting group was 52.8 mmHg compared with 22.3, 24.1 and 24.3 mmHg for the normal function, acute tubular necrosis and cyclosporin nephrotoxicity groups, respectively (P less than 0.01; Wilcoxon unpaired test). There were no differences within these groups related to the type of immunosuppression used. There were no clinical complications associated with the procedure. Thus in newly transplanted patients, fine-needle intrarenal manometry accurately identified rejection and distinguished it from normal function, acute tubular necrosis and cyclosporin nephrotoxicity in all the patients regardless of the immunosuppressants used.

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