Percutaneous Intervention in Acute Renal Attack

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (13) ◽  
pp. 01-05
Author(s):  
A.Q.M Reza

A young patient with renal infarction presented with right lower abdominal pain due to renal artery thrombosis is a rare clinical condition that warrants epidemiologic, clinical, angiographic, and prognostic importance. The patient’s condition was acute and was featured with abdominal pain, leukocytosis, and minimal renal impairment. The case presented here enabled us to widened our vision with patients presented with abdominal pain should warrant clinical suspicion about renal infarction although this is a rare clinical entity.

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 550-555
Author(s):  
Vladimir Vorobev ◽  
Vladimir Beloborodov ◽  
Natalya Balabina ◽  
Konstantin Tolkachev ◽  
Sergei Popov ◽  
...  

Objective: Renal vascular thrombosis is a thrombotic blockage of the major renal arteries resulting in acute damage or chronic kidney disease. The study aims to analyze rare clinical cases of renal artery thrombosis with following renal infarction. Materials and methods: The article present a retrospective study of examination and treatment results of patients diagnosed with the renal arteries thrombosis in the urological hospital of the Irkutsk Clinical Hospital No. 1 in the period 2012-2020. Results and Discussion: During the entire observation period, there were two clinical cases of acute renal artery thrombosis. The 86-year-old woman developed thrombosis because of atrial fibrillation, which was probably the result of inadequate correction (insufficient dose of anticoagulant). Kidney infarction had complications like rapid suppuration because of chronic urinary infection and calculus of the renal pelvis. It resulted in nephrectomy with subsequent recovery. The second case was the 45-year-old man examined according to existing standards, and the diagnosed-on time in the first hours of the disease. However, complete thrombosis of the right renal artery neutralized the effectiveness of conservative therapy with warfarin. In this case, nephrosclerosis and renal failure were natural. Conclusion: Renal artery thrombosis is a rare pathology that requires special attention from the clinician due to the high risk of renal function loss. Timely diagnosis and correct treatment tactics are especially important. Bangladesh Journal of Medical Science Vol.20(3) 2021 p.550-555


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 106-109
Author(s):  
Halil İbrahim Çıkrıklar ◽  
Yasemin Yıldız Kirazaldı ◽  
Murat Yücel ◽  
Yusuf Yürümez

2020 ◽  
Vol 07 (02) ◽  
pp. 22-24
Author(s):  
Kavita M Upadhyay ◽  

Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, increasing evidence suggests that infected patients present a high incidence of thrombotic complications. Besides affecting respiratory tract it also causes systemic inflammation which also leads to coagulopathy affecting major blood vessels in the body. This report describes a case of aortic, renal artery thrombosis in a patient admitted for evaluation of abdominal pain and detected to have high titer of SARS COV-2 IgG antibodies with no prior history suggestive of typical COVID-19 infection (COVID-19 RTPCR and antigen tested negative).


Author(s):  
Muhammad Shohel Almamun ◽  
Abrar Munir ◽  
Ali Reza Raza ◽  
Sakina Koubeh ◽  
Abu zour Hassan ◽  
...  

Renal artery thrombosis is a sporadic serious clinical condition which potentially cause renal infarction. Diagnosis of renal infarction can be delayed or missed due to non specific clinical presentation and overlapping appearance of medical and surgical phenomena. Early diagnosis supported by biochemical and radiological findings while appropriate management potentially improve morbidity and mortality. Persistent abdominal or flank pain with raised LDH and proteinuria on background of thromboembolism risk factors supports the diagnosis. Despite the rarity of the disease rapid identification with prompt medical or endovascular intervention could prevent irreversible renal parenchymal damage.


2022 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 0
Author(s):  
Sudhir Mehta ◽  
Aayush Jain ◽  
Gaurav Bector ◽  
Dinesh Jain ◽  
Vikas Makkar

2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Viviana Bozzano ◽  
Paolo Aseni ◽  
Sandro Di Domenico ◽  
Riccardo Colombo ◽  
Mariella Corciulo ◽  
...  

Acute abdominal pain represents a challenge for the physician because it can hide a serious intra-abdominal pathology necessitating emergency intervention. A 65-year-old man presented to Emergency Department with sudden-onset abdominal pain. He underwent liver transplantation four years before. He complained tenderness on abdominal palpation. Blood chemistry and abdominal x-ray were normal. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography showed acute renal artery thrombosis. The patient underwent renal arterial thrombectomy and stent placement in less than two hours. Organ transplantation is a condition that makes patients at greater risk of life-threatening conditions. Renal artery thrombosis is a rare, severe and misdiagnosed condition which can benefit from a prompt cooperation among emergency physician, surgeon, and interventional radiologist. Transplant patients with acute abdominal pain should be considered at high risk of medical emergency. Acute renal artery thrombosis is a time dependent medical emergency in those patients with chronic drug-induced nephrotoxicity.


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