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AJR Am J Roentgenol ; 144(6): 1235-8, 1985 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3890487

ABSTRACT

A prospective study compared the diagnostic accuracy of sonography and excretory urography in determining the cause of acute flank pain in 61 patients. Forty-one patients had urinary tract stone disease. Of these, five had nonobstructing renal stones and 36 had obstructing stones. A correct diagnosis was made by urography in 85% and by sonography in 66%. Small stones at the ureterovesical junction were more accurately diagnosed by sonography (79%) than by urography (68%). In all the patients where sonography failed to detect the offending stone, the stone was calcified and evident on the plain radiographs. There were no false-positive diagnoses in the patients clinically judged to have passed a renal stone (nine patients) or whose pain was arising outside of the urinary tract (five patients). Neither sonography (17%) nor urography (50%) was accurate in diagnosing acute pyelonephritis in the six patients with this diagnosis. Although sonography is not as accurate overall as urography in acute flank pain, it is a viable alternative in those with recurrent renal colic due to stone disease and in the pregnant patient.


Subject(s)
Pain/diagnosis , Ultrasonography , Urinary Calculi/diagnosis , Urography , Abdomen , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pain/diagnostic imaging , Urinary Calculi/diagnostic imaging
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