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Hydronephrosis

Hydronephrosis is distention and dilation of the renal pelvis, usually caused by obstruction of the free flow of urine from the kidney. more...

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Signs and symptoms

The signs and symptoms of hydronephrosis depends upon whether the obstruction is acute or chronic. Unilateral hydronephrosis may even occur without symptoms.

Blood tests can show elevated creatinine and electrolyte imbalance. Urinalysis may show an elevated pH due to the secondary destruction of nephrons within the affected kidney.

Symptoms that occur regardless of where the obstruction lies include loin or flank pain. An enlarged kidney may be palpable on examination.

Where to obstruction occurs in the lower urinary tract, suprapubic tenderness (with or without a history of bladder outflow obstruction) along with a palpable bladder are strongly suggestive of acute urinary retention, which left untreated is highly likely to cause hydronephrosis.

Upper urinary tract obstruction is characterised by pain in the flank, often radiating to either the abdomen or the groin. Where the obstruction is chronic renal failure may also be present. If the obstruction is complete, an enlarged kidney is often palpable on examination.

Aetiology

The obstruction may be either partial or complete and can occur anywhere from the urethral meatus to the calyces of the renal pelvis.

The obstruction may arise from either inside or outside the urinary tract. Intrinsic obstructions (those that occur within the tract) include blood clots, stones, along with tumours of the kidney, ureter and bladder. Extrinsic obstructions (those that are caused by factors outside of the urinary tract) include pelvic tumours, strictures of the ureters, and neurological defecits.

Complications

Left untreated bilateral obstruction (obstruction occurring to both kidneys rather than one) has a poor prognosis.

Treatment

Treatment of hydronephrosis focusses upon the removal of the obstruction and drainage of the urine that has accumulated behind the obstruction. Therefore, the specific tretment depends upon where the obstruction lies, and whether it is acute or chronic.

Acute obstruction of the upper urinary tract is usually treated by the insertion of a nephrostomy tube. Chronic upper urinary tract obstruction is treated by the insertion of a ureteric stent or a pyeloplasty.

Lower urinary tract obstruction (such as that caused by bladder outflow obstruction secondary to prostatic hypertrophy) is usually treated by insertion of a urinary catheter or a suprapubic catheter.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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VCUG Not Required for Mild Hydronephrosis
From OB/GYN News, 8/15/00 by Mary Ann Moon

WASHINGTON -- Mild hydronephrosis detected by prenatal ultrasound does not warrant subjecting the neonate to voiding cysrourethrography because it doesn't correlate with the presence or the severity of vesicoureteral reflux, Dr. Andrea Arjonilla said at the annual meeting of the American Roentgen Ray Society.

Prenatal ultrasonography frequently identifies mild hydronephrosis in the fetus, but the significance of the finding remains unclear. "All of us get many referrals to follow up on these cases," said Dr. Arjonilla, a pediatric radiologist at Hospital La Paz in Madrid.

She reviewed the voiding cystourethrograms (VCUGs) done on 468 kidneys in infants. A total of 308 kidneys had been identified on prenatal ultrasound as showing mild hydronephrosis, defined as a renal pelvic anteroposterior diameter of 515 mm. The other 160 kidneys were normal contralateral organs.

Only 99 kidneys (32%) showed vesicoureteral reflux on VCUG. The others showed no reflux.

More significantly 36(23%) of the "normal" kidneys also showed vesicoureteral reflux that had not presented any clinical problems.

"There was no significant difference in the incidence of reflux between kidneys that showed mild hydronephrosis and those that did not," Dr. Arjonilla said.

COPYRIGHT 2000 International Medical News Group
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

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