analyse_media
Here is the full extracted and organized content of the ultrasound report:

Ultrasound Report - Kalaignar Centenary Super Speciality Hospital, Guindy, Chennai-32

Department of Radiodiagnosis
FieldDetail
Patient NameChakarapandi
Age / Sex72 years / Male
Date10 July 2026
StudyUltrasound Abdomen & Pelvis

Organ-wise Findings

OrganFinding
LiverNormal size (12.7 cm). Normal echoes. No IHBR/EHBR dilatation. No focal lesion. Portal vein shows normal flow.
GB (Gallbladder)Distended. No evidence of calculi.
PancreasAppears normal. Pancreatic duct not dilated.
SpleenNormal in size.
Right Kidney (RK)Size 10.5 x 5.7 cm. Multiple calculi - largest measures 14 mm in upper pole.
Left Kidney (LK)Size 15 x 6 cm. Cortical mass/lesion 6.6 x 6 cm in upper pole. CMD maintained.
BladderDistended. No calculi. No increase in wall thickness.
ProstateVolume ~30 cc (normal range).

Impression (Handwritten)

  1. Right DJ stent in situ - a ureteric stent is already placed on the right side.
  2. Left gross HDN (Hydronephrosis) with renal parenchymal thinning - maximum parenchymal thickness only 3.3 mm at the lower pole, indicating severely compromised left kidney.
  3. Bilateral renal calculi (kidney stones on both sides).
  4. Kindly correlate clinically.

Summary for the Clinician

This is a 72-year-old male with bilateral kidney stones (nephrolithiasis). The right kidney has a right ureteric (DJ) stent already in place and multiple calculi with the largest at 14 mm. The left kidney is significantly enlarged (15 x 6 cm) with gross hydronephrosis and severely thinned parenchyma (3.3 mm), suggesting long-standing obstruction and likely chronic irreversible damage to the left kidney. There is also a large cortical lesion (6.6 x 6 cm) in the upper pole of the left kidney that warrants further evaluation (CT/MRI) to characterize it fully.
Note: The large left renal upper pole lesion (6.6 x 6 cm cortical) is a significant finding and should be urgently evaluated with a contrast-enhanced CT scan to rule out a renal mass/tumor.
This is a shared conversation. Sign in to Orris to start your own chat.