Reading the Kidneys on X-ray: What the Image Is Quietly Telling You

Renal radiographs don’t shout. They whisper.
If you know what to listen for, they tell you more than you think.

Start with kidney size — but never stop there

  • Use L2 vertebral body length as your reference
  • Cats: kidney length ≈ 2.5–3 × L2
  • Dogs: kidney length ≈ 2.5–3.5 × L2

Size alone does not define health or disease

Always assess shape and margins

  • Smooth, rounded margins → normal or acute processes
  • Irregular, poorly defined margins → suggest chronic disease

A “normal-sized” kidney can still be severely compromised

Compare both kidneys — symmetry matters

  • Kidneys should be similar in size
  • One large + one small kidney is a red flag

Think:

  • Chronic unilateral disease
  • Long-standing obstruction (e.g. ureterolith)
  • Scarring with contralateral compensatory enlargement

Look for stones, but don’t rely on them

  • Nephroliths appear as radiopaque mineral densities
  • Usually within the renal silhouette

May be associated with:

  • Renomegaly
  • Hydronephrosis

Absence of stones on X-ray ≠ absence of disease

Ultrasound often completes what radiographs start

Use X-ray clues to differentiate AKD vs CKD

Acute Kidney Disease (AKD):

  • Normal to enlarged kidneys
  • Smooth margins
  • Preserved contour

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD):

  • Small kidneys
  • Irregular margins
  • Poorly defined contour

Size + shape together guide urgency and prognosis

Check kidney position and opacity

  • Right kidney: more cranial
  • Left kidney: more caudal and mobile

Renal opacity clues:

  • Soft tissue → normal
  • Mineral → stones
  • Gas → consider emphysematous changes

The big takeaway

Renal X-rays are about patterns, not single findings

They won’t give you the answer — but they sharpen your judgment

Those quiet clues often speak before bloodwork does

Dr. Geoff Carullo is a Fellow and the current President of the Philippine College of Canine Practitioners.

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