1 / 31

Urology 4: Hydronephrosis

Urology 4: Hydronephrosis. Contents. Definition Etiology Pathology Clinical features Special investigations Treatment. Definition. Dilatation of renal pelvis & calyces with accompanying destruction of the kidney parenchyma Usually due to partial obstruction to the outflow of urine.

jana
Download Presentation

Urology 4: Hydronephrosis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Urology 4: Hydronephrosis

  2. Contents • Definition • Etiology • Pathology • Clinical features • Special investigations • Treatment

  3. Definition • Dilatation of renal pelvis & calyces with accompanying destruction of the kidney parenchyma • Usually due to partial obstruction to the outflow of urine

  4. Hydronephrosis

  5. Normal kidney Hydronephrosis

  6. Normal Intravenous Pyelogram (IVP)

  7. Intravenous Pyelogram (IVP)Showing Hydronephrosis

  8. Etiology • Primary or secondary • Primary: idiopathic • Secondary: maybe unilateral or bilateral

  9. Causes of unilateral hydornephrosis • Maybe extramural, intramural or Intraluminal • Extramural: • Pressure on the ureter by loaded sigmoid colon, gravid uterus, uterine & ovarian tumors • Involvement of the ureter by malignant neoplasm outside it e.g. carcinoma of the cervix, uterus, colon, rectum, prostate • Aberrant renal vessels • Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis

  10. Causes of unilateral hydornephrosis • Maybe extramural, intramural or Intraluminal • Intramural: • Congenital stenosis or achalasia of the PUJ • Ureterocele • Stricture • Neoplasm of ureter

  11. Causes of unilateral hydornephrosis • Maybe extramural, intramural or Intraluminal • Intraluminal: • Calculus • Congenital folds at the upper end of the ureter

  12. Causes of bilateral hydornephrosis • Due to pathologies in the urethra or the urinary bladder • Causes in the urethra: • Pin – hole meatus • Congenital valves • BPH & carcinoma of prostate • Stricture • Carcinoma of cervix & uterus

  13. Causes of bilateral hydornephrosis • Due to pathologies in the urethra or the urinary bladder • Causes in the bladder: • Calculus • Neoplasms • Sphincter dysfunction

  14. Pathophysiology • Dilatation of the renal pelvis & calyces • Types of hydronephrosis: • Pelvic type • Renal type • Pelvirenal type: most common type, both the pelvis & calyces are equally dilated

  15. Clinical features • May depend on unilateral, intermittent or bilateral hydronephrosis • Unilateral hydronephrosis: • Dull ache & sense of weight on the affected side of the loin • Causes of the hydronephrosis

  16. Clinical features • May depend on unilateral, intermittent or bilateral hydronephrosis • Intermittent hydronephrosis: • Dietl’s crisis

  17. Clinical features • May depend on unilateral, intermittent or bilateral hydronephrosis • Bilateral hydronephrosis: • Features of the causes • Bilateral renal swelling

  18. Special investigations • Straight abdomen of the X- ray • Excretory urography • Retrograde urography • Ultrasound

  19. Treatment • Secondary hydronephrosis: treatment of the cause • Primary hydronephrosis: • Pyeloplasty: • Anderson- Hynes • Culp • Foley • Nephrectomy

  20. Principles of pyeloplasty • To reduce the size of the renal pelvis • Excision of the PUJ • The ureter is attached to the most dependent part of the pelvis

  21. extraperitoneal flank approach, bed of the twelfth rib

More Related