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Nonoperative management of complications of percutaneous renal nephrostomy.
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1989
Year
GlomerulonephritisHemodialysisUrologyRenal DiseaseRenal CareWellesley HospitalMedicineRenal PathologyNonoperative ManagementRenal ArteryKidney FailureDialysis TherapySurgeryHemolysis-hyponatremia-renal Shutdown SyndromeAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseNephrologyReconstructive Urology
Between 1984 and 1986 at the Wellesley Hospital in Toronto, 210 percutaneous renal nephrostomies were performed for drainage and 140 were done to provide access for nephrolithotomy. Less than 2% of the patients experienced complications requiring intervention and less than 0.5% required an open surgical approach for the management of procedure-related problems. Complications that were managed conservatively included splenic puncture, false aneurysm, laceration of the renal artery, arteriovenous fistula, hemorrhage requiring transfusion, pneumothorax-empyema, urinoma, septic shock and the hemolysis-hyponatremia-renal shutdown syndrome.