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HYDRONEPHROSIS

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The dilation of the renal pelvis and calyces. May be considered a physiologic response to ... Transurethral valve ablation, vesicostomy or upper tract diversion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HYDRONEPHROSIS


1
HYDRONEPHROSIS
  • Donna C. Queyquep, M.D.
  • PGY II, Pediatrics
  • November 19, 2004

2
Definition
  • The dilation of the renal pelvis and calyces.
  • May be considered a physiologic response to the
    interruption of urine.
  • Not always caused by obstruction.

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Incidence
  • Pre-natal ultrasound
  • detects fetal anomaly in 1 of pregnancies, of
    which 20-30 are genitourinary in origin and 50
    manifest as hydronephrosis

5
Causes
  • Can be intrinsic, extrinsic or functional and can
    be classified as to level within the urinary
    tract
  • Ureter
  • Intrinsic
  • congenital ureteropelvic junction stricture
  • papillary necrosis
  • iatrogenic
  • blood clot
  • ureteral tumor

6
Causes
  • Extrinsic
  • retroperitoneal cancer
  • aortic aneurysm
  • retrocaval ureter
  • inflammatory bowel disease
  • retroperitoneal hemorrhage
  • lymphocele

7
Causes
  • Functional
  • gram-negative infection
  • neurogenic bladder
  • Bladder
  • Intrinsic
  • calculi
  • bladder neck contracture
  • Functional
  • VUR
  • neurogenic bladder

8
Causes
  • Urethra
  • Intrinsic
  • urethral stricture
  • Extrinsic
  • BPH

9
Antenatal Period
  • The most common cause is physiologic dilation.
  • Metanephric urine production begins at 8 weeks,
    even before ureteral canalization is complete.
  • Transient obstruction with hydronephrosis occurs.

10
Embryology
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Pathophysiology
  • Anatomic and functional processes interrupts the
    flow of urine.
  • There is a rise in ureteral pressure causing
    stretching and dilation if pressures continue to
    rise, leads to decline in renal blood flow and
    GFR.
  • When significant obstruction is persistent, it
    affects nephrogenic tissue and results in varying
    degrees of cystic dysplasia and renal impairment.

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Grading of Severity of Hydronephrosis
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Most Common Causes in Neonates
  • Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction
  • Ureterovesical Junction Obstruction
  • Posterior Urethral Valves
  • Eagle-Barrett Syndrome (a.k.a. Prune Belly
    Syndrome)
  • Vesicoureteral Reflux
  • Ureterocele

18
Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction
  • UPJ is the most common cause of hydronephrosis in
    children.
  • May be the result of incomplete racanalizaton of
    the proximal ureter, abnormal development of
    ureteral musculature, abnormal peristalsis,
    ureteral valves or polyps.
  • Causes functional obstruction.

19
Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction
  • Malefemale ratio is 21.
  • Prior to prenatal screening, about 25 were
    diagnosed in the first year of life.
  • Decreasing frequency with age.

20
Clinical Details of UPJ Obstruction
  • Anatomically indistinct segment of the upper
    collecting system where the renal pelvis funnels
    into the ureter.
  • In 25-40 of kidneys, a supernumerary artery
    crosses the collecting system on its course into
    the kidneys lower pole causing mechanical
    obstruction.
  • Occurs more often on the left side than on the
    right with a 32 ratio.

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Other facts on UPJ
  • Often associated with other congenital renal
    anomalies
  • ectopic or horseshoe kidneys
  • duplication of the collecting system
  • contralateral renal dysplasia
  • MCDK
  • renal agenesis
  • VUR (lt40), often low grade
  • VATER Syndrome

23
Diagnostic Modality for UPJ
  • Ultrasonography is the initial modality of
    choice.
  • IVP
  • Retrograde pyelography
  • Radionuclide renogram

24
Assessments on UTS
  • Renal length/size
  • Degree of caliectasis and parenchymal thickness
  • Presence of ureteral dilatation

25
Treatment for UPJ Pyeloplasty
26
Posterior Urethral Valves
  • Abnormal congenital mucosal folds that are thin
    membranes impeding bladder drainage.
  • Most common obstructive urethral lesion in male
    newborns found at the distal prostatic urethra.
  • Incidence is approxly 1 in 8,000 males.
  • Approxly 50 have reflux.
  • VCUG is the modality of choice.

27
Radiographic signs of PUV
  • distended prostatic urethra
  • valve leaflets
  • bladder and/or bladder neck hypertrophy
  • diverticula
  • narrow stream in the penile urethra
  • incomplete emptying of the bladder

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Treatment of PUV
  • Transurethral valve ablation, vesicostomy or
    upper tract diversion
  • Urethral stricture is a common complication
  • Fetal intervention carries a high risk with
    mortality rate of 43
  • ESRD, renal insufficiency and chronic renal
    failure are long-term consequences

30
  • 30 of boys with posterior urethral valves whose
    symptoms present in infancy are at risk for
    progressive renal insufficiency.

31
Eagle-Barrett Syndrome
  • More commonly known as Prune Belly Syndrome
  • Characterized by
  • deficiency of abdominal wall musculature
  • a dilated, non-obstructed urinary tract
  • bilateral cryptorchidism
  • talipes equinovarus and hip dislocation
  • Incidence is 1/35-50,000
  • gt95 occur in males

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  • Believed to be caused by in-utero urinary tract
    obstruction and a specific mesodermal injury
    between the 4th and 10th week of gestation.
  • Associated with renal dysplasia or agenesis.
  • Often presents with a large-capacity, poorly
    contractile bladder.
  • Heart, pulmonary, GI and orthopedic anomalies
    occur in a large percentage of PBS patients.

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Management
  • Neonatal Period
  • Optimize urinary tract drainage
  • Monitor and treat renal insufficiency
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis if reflux is present
  • Children
  • Surgical repair of reflux
  • Orchiopexy
  • Reconstruction of the abdominal wall
  • Renal transplant

37
Vesicoureteral Reflux
  • Retrograde propulsion of urine into the upper
    urinary tract during bladder contraction.
  • Primary reflux is caused by attenuation of the
    trigone and the contiguous intravesical ureteral
    musculature.
  • May be caused by the ectopic insertion of the
    ureter into the bladder wall resulting in a
    shorter intravesicular ureter, which acts as an
    incompetent valve during urination.

38
  • The ratio of the submucosal tunnel length to the
    ureteral diameter is the primary factor
    determining the effectiveness of the normal valve
    mechanism.
  • It is normally 51, and in those with reflux it
    is 1.41.
  • The intramural length increases from 0.5 cm at
    birth to 1.3 cm by 12 years of age.
  • Duplication of the collecting system and
    ureteroceles should also be considered.

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Some clinical facts about VUR
  • It is genetic.
  • Occurs in about 30 of first-degree relatives.
  • 1/3 of children with a urinary tract infection
    has reflux on VCUG.
  • Primary reflux tends to resolve over time as
    intravesical segment elongates with growth.

42
Grading of Vesicoureteral Reflux
43
Prognosis
  • Kidney is most susceptible to scarring in the
    first year of life and at the time of first upper
    tract infection.
  • Scars less frequently develop after the age of 5.
  • VUR and scarring lead to hypertension,
    progressive renal insufficiency and failure.
  • Resolves spontaneously before adolescence in
  • 90 of Gr. 1 reflux
  • 80 of Gr. 2
  • 50 of Gr. 3
  • 10 of Gr. 4
  • 0 in Grade 5 reflux

44
Treatment
  • Observation
  • Medical treatment of infections
  • Surgical treatment
  • significant hydroureteronephrosis
  • indicated if impossible to keep urine sterile and
    reflux persists
  • acute pyelonephritis occurs
  • evidence of increasing renal damage

45
On Presentation, how do we manage?
  • Antenatal diagnosis of HN
  • Enlarged palpable kidneys on PE
  • Incidental finding on UTS done for
    other anomalies.

46
  • Management would depend on the clinical condition
    of the patient and the suspected nature of the
    lesion.
  • More common to have a unilateral HN that is not
    associated with systemic or pulmonary
    complications.
  • Postnatal UTS confirmation at about 1 month of
    life, depending on severity.
  • Bilateral HN
  • urgent work-up especially when accompanied by
    oligohydramnios and pulmonary disease
  • if male infant, postnatal VCUG and UTS

47
  • Prophylactic antibiotics (Amoxicillin 20mg/kg PO
    daily) before VCUG is performed, as
    hydronephrosis may be due to reflux.
  • DMSA scan to evaluate renal function.
  • Definitely
  • Check presence and regularity of voiding.
  • Mild HN UA, BMP
  • Moderate UA, BMP, VCUG
  • Refer to specialist

48
References
  • Tanagho and McAninch. Smiths General
    Urology.16th ed 2004, McGraw-Hill Companies,
    USA.
  • Zitelli and Davis. Atlas of Pediatric Physical
    Diagnosis. 4th ed2002, Mosby, Inc., USA.
  • Resnick and Novick. Urology Secrets. 3rd ed2003,
    Hanley and Belfus, Inc., USA.
  • Edmondson, J.D. Antenatal Hydronephrosis. Mar
    2004, Emedicine article.
  • Wiener, J.S. Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction,
    Congenital. Aug 2004, Emedicine article.
  • Maniam, P. Hydronephrosis and Hydroureter. Aug
    2004, Emedicine article.
  • Div of Urology, Childrens Hosp, Boston, MA.
    Neonatal Hydronephrosis. Digital Urology Journal.
    Internet download.

49
References
  • McCarthy, K. Vesicoureteral Reflux. Mar 2004,
    Emedicine article.
  • Behrman, et al. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics.
    17th ed Saunders Co., USA.
  • Lloyd-Davies, et al. Color Atlas of Urology. 2nd
    edMosby-Year Book Europe Limited, London,
    England.
  • Gillenwater, et al. Adult and Pediatric Urology.
    4th ed, Vol. I 2002, Lippincott Williams and
    Wilkins, USA.
  • Cloherty, et al. Manual of Neonatal Care. 5th ed
    2004, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, USA.
  • Gonzales and Bauer. Pediatric Urology Practice.
    1999 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, USA.

50
THANK YOU!And HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
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