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  2. Radioisotope renography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioisotope_renography

    Radioisotope renography is a form of medical imaging of the kidneys that uses radiolabelling.A renogram, which may also be known as a MAG3 scan, allows a nuclear medicine physician or a radiologist to visualize the kidneys and learn more about how they are functioning. [1]

  3. Nephrocalcinosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nephrocalcinosis

    It may cause acute kidney injury. It is now more commonly used to describe diffuse, fine, renal parenchymal calcification in radiology. [2] It is caused by multiple different conditions and is determined by progressive kidney dysfunction. These outlines eventually come together to form a dense mass. [3]

  4. Renal ultrasonography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renal_ultrasonography

    The kidney is divided into parenchyma and renal sinus. The renal sinus is hyperechoic and is composed of calyces, the renal pelvis, fat and the major intrarenal vessels. In the normal kidney, the urinary collecting system in the renal sinus is not visible, but it creates a heteroechoic appearance with the interposed fat and vessels.

  5. Putty kidney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Putty_kidney

    Parenchymal destruction: The renal tissue undergoes caseous necrosis, fibrosis, and calcification. Fibrosis and shrinkage : Progressive scarring results in a small, irregularly shaped kidney. Calcification : Deposition of calcium salts within the necrotic tissue leads to the characteristic dense appearance of the kidney on imaging.

  6. Anatomical pathology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatomical_pathology

    Anatomic pathology relates to the processing, examination, and diagnosis of surgical specimens by a physician trained in pathological diagnosis. Clinical pathology involves the laboratory analysis of tissue samples and bodily fluids; procedures may include blood sample analysis, urinalysis, stool sample analysis, and analysis of spinal fluid ...

  7. Renal fascia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renal_fascia

    The renal fascia was originally described as consisting of two distinct structures: the anterior renal fascia (Gerota's fascia), and posterior renal fascia (Zuckerkandl's fascia); these two fasciae were said to fuse laterally to form the lateroconal fascia. Understanding of the structure of the renal fascia has subsequently evolved. [1]

  8. Page kidney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_Kidney

    Since Page kidney is a unilateral process, symptom presentation differs significantly depending on if patients have native kidneys or only one functioning kidney, such as renal transplant recipients. [2] In those with a normally functioning second kidney, the only symptom may be new-onset hypertension.

  9. Parenchyma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parenchyma

    The parenchymal cells include myocytes, and many types of specialised cells. The cells are often attached to each other and also to their nearby epithelial cells mainly by gap junctions and hemidesmosomes. There is much variation in the types of cell in the parenchyma according to the species and anatomical regions.

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