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Article
Nephrocalcinosis in premature infants: variability in ultrasound detection
Neonatology
  • Thomas Campfield, Tufts University School of Medicine
  • Francis J. Bednarek, University of Massachusetts Medical School
  • Mariann Pappagallo, University of Connecticut Health Center
  • Frederick Hamp, Tufts University School of Medicine
  • John Ziewacz, University of Connecticut Health Center
  • Jacqueline Wellman, Memorial Health Care
  • Gary Rockwell, Tufts University
  • Gregory Braden, Baystate Medical Center
  • Patrecia Flynn-Valone, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
  • Michael Neylan, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
  • Antonio Pangan, Abbott Laboratories
UMMS Affiliation
Department of Pediatrics
Publication Date
1999-10-1
Document Type
Article
Subjects
Evaluation Studies as Topic; Humans; Infant, Newborn; *Infant, Premature; Nephrocalcinosis; Observer Variation; Prospective Studies
Disciplines
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure variability among radiologists in the ultrasound diagnosis of nephrocalcinosis in premature infants.

METHODOLOGY: In this prospective multicenter study, renal ultrasounds were performed on 54 very low birth weight infants using a 5.0- and 7.5-MHz transducer, and these ultrasounds were read independently by three radiologists. kappa coefficients were calculated to assess variability in identification of nephrocalcinosis among the radiologists.

RESULTS: The kappa coefficient (+/- confidence intervals) using a 5.0-MHz transducer was 0.143 (0.108, 0.178); using the 7.5-MHz transducer, the kappa coefficient was 0.268 (0.243, 0.293). All three radiologists agreed in their identification of nephrocalcinosis on 3 of 54 ultrasounds using a 5.0-MHz transducer; a total of 6 of 54 ultrasounds obtained using a 7.5-MHz transducer were read as positive by all three radiologists.

CONCLUSION: There is significant variability among radiologists in the ultrasound identification of nephrocalcinosis in premature infants; a 7.5-MHz ultrasound transducer is associated with less variability in recognizing this lesion.

Source
J Perinatol. 1999 Oct-Nov;19(7):498-500.
Related Resources
Link to Article in PubMed
PubMed ID
10685298
Citation Information
Thomas Campfield, Francis J. Bednarek, Mariann Pappagallo, Frederick Hamp, et al.. "Nephrocalcinosis in premature infants: variability in ultrasound detection" Vol. 19 Iss. 7 (1999) ISSN: 0743-8346 (Linking)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/gregory_braden/58/