Study design: A retrospective analysis.
Objectives: To examine the natural history of renal scarring in the spinal cord injured population.
Setting: United Kingdom.
Methods: All spinal cord injured patients with renal scars at our establishment were considered eligible. A total of 27 patients with renal scars were identified. No patient had renal scarring at presentation on radiological imaging. All patients had annual renal imaging with a mean follow up period of 19.1 years. The presence of new scars was considered as evidence of progression.
Results: In all, 59% of kidneys developed renal scars with a mean time interval between spinal injury and renal scar development of 13 years. Of these kidneys with scars, only 15.6% demonstrated progression of the scarring process. There were no deaths due to renal causes.
Conclusion: The aetiology of renal scarring is multifactorial. The findings of this study suggest that renal scarring in the spinal cord injured population is predominantly a nonprogressive process once a scar has developed. This is in concordance with the belief that renal scarring in the paediatric population with vesicoureteric reflux is also a stable, nonprogressive process.