1305 Ureteral Stenting in Conservative Management of Grade IV Blunt Renal Injury

2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_6) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Mukhtar A Mukhtar ◽  
M. Gareeballah Yousif Hijazi ◽  
B.A. Abdalaziz Alshareif ◽  
M. Yahia Ibrahim

Abstract Post-traumatic urinomas are well-described complications associated with the nonoperative management of major blunt renal injuries. A 16-year-old male sustained a motor vehicle accident. Brought after 30 minutes to emergency department, upon arrival he was fully conscious, complaining of severe right hypochondrial and loin pain, abdomen was tender and guarded over the right side, urinary catheter inserted revealed gross haematuria, the patient was resuscitated accordingly, fast ultrasound scan showed minimal fluid collection in the Morison's pouch, the right kidney was swollen with perinephric fluid collection and poor cortico-medullary differentiation. Urgent CT scan findings were deep avulsion of the right kidney. The Patient was planned for conservative management, admitted to high dependency ward, CT scan repeated, and the size of urinoma increased compared to the initial CT, so he was planned for retrograde pyelography and ureteric stenting. Intra-operatively the right ureter was canulated, contrast injected. The pelvi-ureteric junction was intact, extravasation of contrast in the upper pole of the kidney. The right ureter was stented using a size 6 multiloop stent, with the tip directed into the upper pole calyx. The Patient showed dramatic improvement, haematuria cleared and the patient was discharged well after 12 days and the stent was removed after 6 weeks. Despite the improvements with nonoperative management, complications are described and include delayed hemorrhage, delayed massive hematuria and renal scaring with loss of function. Ureteric stenting is playing a major part in the conservative management of high-grade renal injury particularly grade IV type.

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amol R. Chitre ◽  
Hiren M. Divecha ◽  
Mounir Hakimi ◽  
Hans A. J. Marynissen

Coracoid fractures are rare injuries in themselves. Even rarer are isolated fractures of the coracoid in the skeletally immature patient. Due to the low numbers of these fractures, there is no true consensus on how to treat them. We report two cases of an isolated fracture of the coracoid. Case A is a 13-year-old boy who sustained the coracoid fracture following a skiing injury; case B is a 15-year-old boy who fell onto the right shoulder during a wheelbarrow race at school. Initial radiographs in case A suggested a displaced fracture; however, a CT scan taken after a short period of conservative treatment showed minimal displacement. In case B both the radiographs and CT scan showed no displacement. Both injuries were treated conservatively and united uneventfully with a full return to function. We advocate conservative management for these injuries in the skeletally immature patient.


2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 50-51
Author(s):  
F Van Schouwenburg ◽  
H Lameen

A 30 year-old woman presented at the casualty department 12 days after having given birth to a healthy baby via normal vaginal delivery. She complained of increasing pain and a mass in her right flank. There were no complaints of nausea, vomiting, dysuria or abnormal bowel habits. On examination, the patient was acutely distressed, in severe pain and was anaemic with an Hb of 5 g/dl. Her blood pressure was 151/71 mmHg and her pulse rate 125/minute. Physical examination revealed a severely distended abdomen with features of peritonitis. An abdominal ultrasound revealed a large abdominal fluid collection and a CT scan was therefore requested. A contrast-enhanced CT scan demonstrated a large homogenous retroperitoneal fluid collection in the right flank, with a 25mm rounded, intensely enhancing focus located close to the inferior border of the collection. The collection displaced the bowel to the left and inferiorly, and the liver, superiorly. The differential diagnosis included a ruptured ovarian artery aneurysm. As soon as the patient was stable, she was taken for ovarian artery embolization that was successfully accomplished. The patient recovered well in the ward.


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 37-37
Author(s):  
James K. Kuan ◽  
Robert Kaufman ◽  
Jonathan L. Wright ◽  
Charles Mock ◽  
Avery B. Nathens ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hajime Kataoka

Treatment of lymphedema using a pharmacologic approach is reported to have limited efficacy. Here, I report a patient with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and acute worsening of her chronic lymphedema, in whom treatment with acetazolamide and a sodiumglucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) effectively improved the lymphedema. A 94-year-old woman, who was treated for T2DM, hyperlipidemia, and hypertension for 17 years at my hospital presented to the emergency room because of acute worsening of her chronic right leg lymphedema with increased swelling, tightness, and dull aching. A pharmacologic approach was used to treat her worsening lymphedema. Acetazolamide 500 mg/d was administered to treat the acute tissue fluid collection in the right lymphedematous leg. Ten days later, the patient’s body weight was markedly reduced by 3.2 kg, pitting in the right leg was markedly improved, and the circumference of right limb was decreased. On day 11, the glucose-lowering agent vildagliptin was switched to the SGLT2i empagliflozin 10 mg/d. On day 70, her body weight had decreased further by 2.8 kg, and the circumference of her right limb was greatly reduced compared with that under treatment with acetazolamide. Her serum chloride concentration was increased after treatment, but her hemoglobin and hematocrit values did not change during the study period. In conclusion, acetazolamide and an SGLT2i have acute diuretic effects for draining the excess tissue fluid in the lymphedematous limb without vascular contraction by enhancing vascular tonicity. Additionally, an SGLT2i may have chronic effects for reducing fat deposits in the lymphedematous limb.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 299
Author(s):  
Yeong Jin Kim ◽  
Tae-Young Jung ◽  
In-Young Kim ◽  
Shin Jung ◽  
Kyung-Sub Moon

Postoperative complications after brain tumor surgery occur occasionally and it is important for clinicians to know how to properly manage each complication. Here, we described a rare case of late-onset, subdural fluid collection localized at the resection cavity that caused motor weakness after convexity meningioma resection, requiring differentiation from an abscess, to help clinicians determine treatment strategies. A 58-year-old right-handed female was admitted to the hospital with a headache and posterior neck pain. Brain computed tomography (CT) scans and magnetic resonance (MR) images showed a homogeneously enhanced, calcified, and multi-lobulated mass adjacent to the right motor strip without perilesional edema. The patient underwent surgery without incident or residual deficit and was discharged from the hospital in good condition. Six weeks after surgery, the patient complained of left arm monoparesis without infection-related symptoms. Brain imaging studies showed a localized fluid collection in the resection cavity with an enhanced margin and perilesional edema. Diffusion restriction was not detected. After three months of conservative treatment without surgery or antibiotics, she recovered from the neurologic deficits, and brain imaging studies showed the spontaneous regression of the fluid collection and perilesional edema. Late-onset, localized fluid collection at the resection cavity, which is similar to an abscess, could occur three to eight weeks after meningioma resection. When there are predisposing factors, including blood components and hemostatic materials in the surgical cavity, it is important for clinicians to understand this type of complication and choose conservative management as a feasible strategy.


Author(s):  
Majid Anwer ◽  
Atique Ur Rehman ◽  
Farheen Ahmed ◽  
Satyendra Kumar ◽  
Md Masleh Uddin

Abstract Introduction Traumatic head injury with extradural hematoma (EDH) is seen in 2% of patients. Development of EDH on the contralateral side is an uncommon complication that has been reported in various case reports. Case Report We report here a case of an 18-year-old male who had a road traffic injury. He was diagnosed as a case of left-sided large frontotemporoparietal acute extradural bleed with a mass effect toward the right side. He was managed with urgent craniotomy and evacuation of hematoma. A noncontrast computed tomography (NCCT) scan performed 8 hours after postoperative period showed a large frontotemporoparietal bleed on the right side with a mass effect toward the left side. He was again taken to the operating room and right-sided craniotomy and evacuation of hematoma were performed. A postoperative NCCT scan revealed a resolved hematoma. The patient made a complete recovery in the postoperative period and is doing well. Conclusion Delayed onset epidural hematoma is diagnosed when the initial computed tomography (CT) scan is negative or is performed early and when late CT scan performed to assess clinical or ICP deterioration shows an EDH. The diagnosis of such a condition requires a high index of suspicion based on the mechanism of injury along with fracture patterns. Additionally, change in pupillary size, raised intracranial pressure, and bulging of the brain intraoperatively are additional clues for contralateral bleeding. Neurologic deterioration may or may not be associated with delayed EDH presentation. An early postoperative NCCT scan within 24 hours is recommended to detect this complication with or without any neurologic deterioration.


Stroke ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 44 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahram Majidi ◽  
Basit Rahim ◽  
Sarwat I Gilani ◽  
Waqas I Gilani ◽  
Malik M Adil ◽  
...  

Background: The temporal evolution of intracerebral hematomas and perihematoma edema in the ultra-early period on computed tomographic (CT) scans in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is not well understood. We aimed to investigate hematoma and perihematoma changes in “neutral brain” models of ICH. Methods: One human and 6 goat cadaveric heads were used as “neutral brains” to provide physical properties of the brain without any biological activity or new bleeding. ICH was induced by slow injection of 4 ml of fresh blood into the right basal ganglia of the goat brains. Similarly, 20 ml of fresh blood was injected deep into the white matter of the human cadaver head in each hemisphere. Serial CT scans of the heads were performed at 0, 1, 3, and 5 hours after inducing ICH. Analyze software (AnalyzeDirect, Overland Park, KS) was used to measure hematoma and perihematoma hypodensity volumes in the baseline and follow up CT scans. Results: The initial hematoma volumes of 11.6 ml and 10.5 ml in the right and the left hemispheres of the human cadaver brain gradually decreased to 6.6 ml and 5.4 ml at 5 hours, showing 43% and 48% retraction of hematoma, respectively. The volume of the perihematoma hypodensity in the right and left hemisphere increased from 2.6 ml and 2.2 ml in the 1 hour follow up CT scans to 4.9 ml and 4.4 ml in the 5 hour CT scan, respectively. Hematoma retraction was also observed in all six ICH models in the goat brains. The mean ICH volume in the goat heads was decreased from 1.49 ml in the baseline CT scan to 1.01 ml in the 5 hour follow up CT scan showing 29.6% hematoma retraction. Perihematoma hypodensity was visualized in 70% of ICH in goat brains, with an increasing mean hypodensity volume of 0.4 ml in the baseline CT scan to 0.8 ml in the 5 hour follow up CT scan. Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that substantial hematoma retraction and perihematoma hypodensity occurs in intracerebral hematomas in the absence of any new bleeding or biological activity of the surrounding brain. Such observations suggest that active bleeding is underestimated in patients with no or small hematoma expansion and our understanding of perihematoma hypodesity needs to be reconsidered.


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