Cases reported "Uremia"

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1/30. Radionuclide renography: a personal approach.

    Recent advances have increased the value of radionuclide renography in evaluating the patient with suspected disease of the genitourinary tract. The use of the consensus process to help standardize procedures and recommend interpretative criteria provides guidance for the nuclear medicine practitioner, serves as a basis to improve the standard of practice, and facilitates pooling of data from different centers. This review draws on the consensus criteria to present a personal approach to radionuclide renography with a particular emphasis on diuresis renography and the detection of renovascular hypertension. patients are encouraged to come well hydrated and void immediately prior to the study. Our standard radiopharmaceutical is 99mTc mercaptoacetyltriglycine (MAG3). Routine quantitative indices include a MAG3 clearance, whole kidney and cortical (parenchymal) regions of interest, measurements of relative uptake, time to peak height (Tmax), 20 min/max count ratio, residual urine volume and a T(1/2) in patients undergoing diuresis renography. A 1-minute image of the injection site is obtained at the conclusion of the study to check for infiltration because infiltration can invalidate a plasma sample clearance and alter the renogram curve. A postvoid image of the kidneys and bladder is obtained to calculate residual urine volume and to better evaluate drainage from the collecting system. In patients undergoing diuresis renography, the T(1/2) is calculated using a region of interest around the activity in the dilated collecting system. A prolonged T(1/2), however, should never be the sole criterion for diagnosing the presence of obstruction; the T(1/2) must be interpreted in the context of the sequential images, total and individual kidney function, other quantitative indices and available diagnostic studies. The goal of ACE inhibitor renography is to detect renovascular hypertension, not renal artery stenosis. patients with a positive study have a high probability of cure or amelioration of the hypertension following revascularization. In patients with azotemia or in patients with a small, poorly functioning kidney, the test result is often indeterminate (intermediate probability) with an abnormal baseline study that does not change following ACE inhibition. In patients with normal renal function, the test is highly accurate. To avoid unrealistic expectations on the part of the referring physician, it is often helpful to explain the likely differences in test results in these two-patient populations prior to the study.
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ranking = 1
keywords = urinary
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2/30. Pelvic lipomatosis presenting as uraemic encephalopathy.

    Pelvic lipomatosis is a benign disorder of unknown aetiology, characterised by deposition of mature fat in the pelvis. It has a variable natural history, manifesting either with symptoms attributable to the lower urinary tract or varying degrees of renal failure. Owing to the mild, non-specific initial symptoms and slow progression, presentation is delayed and patients are often lost to follow-up, only to present with advanced renal failure later on. We report a case of a young patient with pelvic lipomatosis who, after an initial diagnosis, was lost to follow-up for several years and then presented with uraemic encephalopathy. The case highlights the importance of regular follow-up and an early intervention before irreversible changes occur.
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ranking = 1
keywords = urinary
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3/30. dialysis access induced limb ischemia corrected using quantitative duplex ultrasound.

    dialysis access induced limb ischemia (DAILI) is a rare complication after the creation of an arteriovenous fistula in infancy but can cause irreversible ischemic limb damage in severe cases. The incidence of DAILI is higher in bridge graft fistulas than in native fistulas. DAILI patients may be managed by surgically reducing the volume flow in the fistula. However, in the pediatric age group, such a reduction of volume flow may result in thrombosis or an inadequate flow for effective dialysis. Several methods have been described to achieve the delicate balance between essential flow in the fistula and adequate limb perfusion pressure. We have developed a new method employing preoperative duplex ultrasonography to predict quantitatively the reduction in volume flow in the fistula that will allow effective dialysis while providing adequate limb perfusion. The preoperative assessment was reproduced on the operating table using intraoperative duplex. A 3-year-old girl thus treated has had resolution of her ischemic symptoms and maintains long-term patency of her dialysis access.
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ranking = 4.7426825019694
keywords = fistula
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4/30. Autocystectomy following extensive genitourinary tuberculosis: presentation and management.

    Genitourinary tuberculosis is an important cause of morbidity in developing and developed countries. We describe a case of extensive genitourinary tuberculosis in which there was complete destruction of the right kidney, stricture of the entire left ureter and an autocystectomized bladder. He presented in azotemia with urinary incontinence and was managed by right nephroureterectomy, ileal replacement of left ureter and ileal neobladder after a preliminary nephrostomy and antituberculous chemotherapy.
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ranking = 7
keywords = urinary
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5/30. Unusual presentation of gallstones.

    gallstones are usually asymptomatic in the majority of patients. gallstones can migrate through a cholecysto-duodenal fistula and may cause an intestinal obstruction anywhere along the gastrointestinal tract. The obstruction usually occurs at the level of the ileocecal valve. In most cases, the clinical presentation includes symptoms related to the intestinal obstruction including abdominal pain and vomiting. We report an unusual case of gallstones presented with acute prerenal azotemia as the major manifestation.
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ranking = 0.79044708366156
keywords = fistula
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6/30. Non-dilated urinary tract obstruction.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe the occurrence of obstructive uropathy in the absence of dilatation of the urinary tract. CLINICAL FEATURES: Five cases of non-dilated obstructive nephropathy are described. All patients were uraemic on presentation. Obstruction was caused by retroperitoneal malignancy in two patients and uric acid lithiasis in the remaining three. All patients had at least one ultrasound examination. Isotope renography and computed tomography were performed in three and four patients respectively. None of these imaging techniques suggested obstruction in any of the cases. Radionuclide scans were characterised by unusually poor perfusion and parenchymal phase images. INTERVENTION AND OUTCOME: An immediate diuresis and a rapid return of normal renal function occurred after relief of the obstruction in all cases. CONCLUSION: The absence of dilatation in obstructive nephropathy is uncommon but may be responsible for delayed diagnosis and management of a readily treatable cause of acute renal failure.
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ranking = 5
keywords = urinary
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7/30. Acral gangrene attributed to calcific azotaemic arteriopathy and the steal effect of an arteriovenous fistula.

    We describe a young male non-smoker who developed acral gangrene within 4 months of commencing haemodialysis. amputation of the left hand proximal to the wrist was ultimately required. The onset of peripheral gangrene in this dialysis patient is attributed to calcific azotaemic arteriopathy and the steal effect of an arteriovenous fistula.
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ranking = 3.9522354183078
keywords = fistula
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8/30. Spurious azotemia associated with 5-fluorocytosine therapy.

    A patient with false elevation of serum creatinine level due to 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) is reported. 5-FC interferes with the enzymatic method used for creatinine determination in the Kodak Ektachem analyzer. Clinicians should be aware of the potential for spurious azotemia in patients receiving 5-FC therapy for fungal urinary tract infections.
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ranking = 1
keywords = urinary
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9/30. uremia as a complication to urinary retention due to hypothyreosis. Case report.

    uremia caused by urinary retention necessitated acute hemodialysis in a middle-aged woman. The primary etiology was most probably hypothyreosis. Normal micturition was reestablished after thyroid substitution.
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ranking = 5
keywords = urinary
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10/30. Urofacial (ochoa) syndrome.

    Between 1965 and 1986 we saw 36 children with enuresis and urinary tract infection in association with "inversion" of facial expression when laughing. Urologic work-up of these patients disclosed characteristic findings of mild neuropathic bladder in all cases, with severe urinary tract damage in most of them. The clear association of distortion in facial expression and neuropathic bladder with resultant damage to the genitourinary tract should prompt urological evaluation of individuals with "inversion" of facial expression. About two thirds of the patients also had moderate to severe constipation. We suggest the term urofacial syndrome for this disorder. The occurrence of the disorder in multiple sibs, normal parents, increased parental consanguinity, and equal sex ratio indicate autosomal recessive inheritance.
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ranking = 3
keywords = urinary
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