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Eliciting renal tenderness by sonopalpation in diagnosing acute pyelonephritis

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2017

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Springer Milan
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Faust, Jeremy S., and James W. Tsung. 2017. “Eliciting renal tenderness by sonopalpation in diagnosing acute pyelonephritis.” Critical Ultrasound Journal 9 (1): 1. doi:10.1186/s13089-016-0056-6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13089-016-0056-6.

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Abstract

Diagnosing acute pyelonephritis relies on the combination of historical, physical, and laboratory findings. Costovertebral angle tenderness is important, although its accuracy is unknown. Point-of-care ultrasound-guided palpation (sonopalpation) may aid clinicians in localizing pain to discrete anatomic structures in cases of suspected acute pyelonephritis lacking classic features. We describe three low-to-moderate pre-test probability cases wherein maximal tenderness was elicited by renal sonopalpation, aiding in the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis. In a fourth case, absence of renal tenderness to sonopalpation in a patient exhibiting typical acute pyelonephritis features led to an alternate diagnosis. Therefore, renal sonopalpation may be useful in confirming or refuting suspected cases.

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Emergency medicine, Pyelonephritis, Point-of-care ultrasonography, Sonopalpation

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