Ultrasonographic study of hemodynamics and CEUS in the rhesus monkey kidney.
2021
Nonhuman primates share many developmental similarities with humans. As the world has recognized the rhesus monkey as a standard experimental monkey, studies of rhesus monkey are very important and essential. The purpose of this study was to use gray-scale ultrasound, color Doppler flow imaging (CDFI), and contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) to study the ultrasound appearance of adult healthy rhesus monkey kidneys and to investigate the relationship between renal ultrasound manifestations and body weight, gender, and the left and right kidneys. Thirty adult healthy rhesus monkeys were studied in the experiments. The size of the kidney and the length and diameter of the renal artery were measured. The peak systolic velocity (PSV), end diastolic velocity (EDV), and resistance index (RI) of the renal artery and intrarenal arteries were measured by CDFI. In CEUS, the time-intensity curve (TIC) was used to obtain microvascular perfusion parameters. There were significant differences in renal size, diameter and length of the renal artery, and hemodynamics of the renal arteries between the different weight groups. In CEUS, there were significant differences in area under curve (AUC), time from peak to one half (THP), intensity peak (PI), time to peak (TTP), mean transit time (MTT), and wash-in-slope (WIS) between the different weight groups. There were no statistical differences between genders or the left and right kidneys. Our study provides valuable reference data for the studies of the kidney and indicates that CEUS can be used to evaluate renal perfusion in rhesus monkeys.
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