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Traumatic Rupture of Horseshoe Kidney
12
Citations
3
References
2011
Year
UrologyPathological KidneysRenal PathologyLower Limb TraumaVascular SurgeryRight Renal ArteryCt ScanVascular TraumaSurgeryVascular AccessAcute Kidney InjuryMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryNephrologyEmergency MedicineTraumatic Rupture
We present the case of a 25-year-old male who came to the emergency room for pain and abdominal distension following trauma to the mesogastrium. A CT scan was performed, revealing a voluminous retroperitoneal hematoma with laceration of both inferior renal poles with regard to rupture of the isthmus of a horseshoe kidney. The patient presented anemization and increased pain, requiring selective embolization by means of arteriography of a branch of the right renal artery and placement of a double J stent due to urinary extravasation in the lower left kidney pole. Following 1 year of monitoring, the patient has maintained normal renal function. Renal affection in blunt abdominal trauma is frequent, occurring in 7% of previously pathological kidneys. The traumatic rupture of horseshoe kidney is facilitated by its particular anatomical characteristics, constituting an infrequent entity, knowledge of which is necessary to achieve conservative management that renders it possible to preserve renal function.
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