Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney

Spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis (SRRP) is a rare condition resulting in an extravasation of urine into retroperitoneal space. Due to the uncharacteristic symptoms, often mimicking renal colic, its diagnosis may be complicated. Herein, we report a case of a 73-year-old male with a solitary functi...

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Main Authors: Maciej Tylski, Katarzyna Muras-Szwedziak, Michał Nowicki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karger Publishers 2021-07-01
Series:Case Reports in Nephrology and Dialysis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/512588
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spelling doaj-4702bba2d9d4467dbe33d3fb7280a65f2021-08-19T12:02:01ZengKarger PublishersCase Reports in Nephrology and Dialysis2296-97052021-07-0111222122610.1159/000512588512588Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning KidneyMaciej TylskiKatarzyna Muras-SzwedziakMichał Nowickihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0823-5440Spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis (SRRP) is a rare condition resulting in an extravasation of urine into retroperitoneal space. Due to the uncharacteristic symptoms, often mimicking renal colic, its diagnosis may be complicated. Herein, we report a case of a 73-year-old male with a solitary functioning kidney who presented with malaise and right-sided abdominal pain, rapidly followed by anuria. Laboratory tests showed the signs of AKI. Contrast-enhanced CT performed soon after the admission showed nonspecific abnormalities in the right middle abdomen suspected to be either inflammatory infiltration or surgical scarring. Symptomatic treatment was started, and an acute hemodialysis treatment was commenced. After a temporal improvement, the patient’s general condition worsened significantly, with exacerbated pain and massive increase in plasma creatinine. A second contrast-enhanced CT was performed with an addition of urography phase, revealing the extravasation of the contrast media in the location suggesting the rupture of the renal pelvis. The patient was treated successfully by the placement of a double-J ureteral stent into the ureter. Usually, a clear etiology of SRRP can be determined, that is, urinary tract obstruction, but in this case, we could not find a definite cause. It is important to remember that in the presence of a nonspecific abdominal pain and laboratory signs of AKI, a rare cause like SRRP should be taken into consideration. Performing a contrast CT scan with urography phase can save time in establishing a diagnosis and enable immediate urological intervention.https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/512588spontaneous rupture of renal pelvissingle functioning kidneyurine extravasationurinoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maciej Tylski
Katarzyna Muras-Szwedziak
Michał Nowicki
spellingShingle Maciej Tylski
Katarzyna Muras-Szwedziak
Michał Nowicki
Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
Case Reports in Nephrology and Dialysis
spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis
single functioning kidney
urine extravasation
urinoma
author_facet Maciej Tylski
Katarzyna Muras-Szwedziak
Michał Nowicki
author_sort Maciej Tylski
title Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
title_short Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
title_full Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
title_fullStr Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
title_full_unstemmed Idiopathic Spontaneous Rupture of Renal Pelvis in a Single Functioning Kidney
title_sort idiopathic spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis in a single functioning kidney
publisher Karger Publishers
series Case Reports in Nephrology and Dialysis
issn 2296-9705
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis (SRRP) is a rare condition resulting in an extravasation of urine into retroperitoneal space. Due to the uncharacteristic symptoms, often mimicking renal colic, its diagnosis may be complicated. Herein, we report a case of a 73-year-old male with a solitary functioning kidney who presented with malaise and right-sided abdominal pain, rapidly followed by anuria. Laboratory tests showed the signs of AKI. Contrast-enhanced CT performed soon after the admission showed nonspecific abnormalities in the right middle abdomen suspected to be either inflammatory infiltration or surgical scarring. Symptomatic treatment was started, and an acute hemodialysis treatment was commenced. After a temporal improvement, the patient’s general condition worsened significantly, with exacerbated pain and massive increase in plasma creatinine. A second contrast-enhanced CT was performed with an addition of urography phase, revealing the extravasation of the contrast media in the location suggesting the rupture of the renal pelvis. The patient was treated successfully by the placement of a double-J ureteral stent into the ureter. Usually, a clear etiology of SRRP can be determined, that is, urinary tract obstruction, but in this case, we could not find a definite cause. It is important to remember that in the presence of a nonspecific abdominal pain and laboratory signs of AKI, a rare cause like SRRP should be taken into consideration. Performing a contrast CT scan with urography phase can save time in establishing a diagnosis and enable immediate urological intervention.
topic spontaneous rupture of renal pelvis
single functioning kidney
urine extravasation
urinoma
url https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/512588
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AT michałnowicki idiopathicspontaneousruptureofrenalpelvisinasinglefunctioningkidney
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