1.Management of an Iatrogenic Injury in a Crossed Ectopic Kidney Without Fusion.
Tarun JINDAL ; Mir Reza KAMAL ; Satyadip MUKHERJEE ; Soumendra Nath MANDAL ; Dilip KARMAKAR
Korean Journal of Urology 2014;55(8):554-556
Crossed renal ectopia is a condition in which a kidney is located on the side opposite of its ureteral insertion. Ninety percent of crossed ectopic kidneys are fused to their ipsilateral uncrossed renal unit. Crossed renal ectopia without fusion is rare, with only 62 patients reported in the literature to date. These kidneys may suffer iatrogenic injury during an unrelated surgical intervention. The injury, unless self-limiting, may necessitate the removal of the ectopic kidney. We present a unique case of a dual injury, renal as well as ureteric, in a crossed ectopic kidney without fusion that was successfully managed without surgical excision.
Adult
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Choristoma/radiography/*therapy
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Humans
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*Iatrogenic Disease
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Kidney/*abnormalities/injuries/radiography
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Male
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Stents
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Ureter/abnormalities/injuries/radiography
2.Bilateral Single Ectopic Ureters Draining Into a Grossly Dilated Vagina in an Adolescent Female.
Soumendra Nath MANDAL ; Gokulakrishnan Puttuthakku JAGADHEESAN ; Mir Reza KAMAL ; Satyadip MUKHERJEE ; Ranjit Kumar DAS ; Dilip KARMAKAR
Korean Journal of Urology 2013;54(7):482-485
A 16-year-old female presented with dribbling of urine along with voluntary voiding since birth. Renal imaging revealed hydroureteronephrosis on the right side; the uterus and ovary were normal. A radionuclide scan showed a left nonfunctional kidney. On cystovaginoscopy, the urethra was shown to be normal and the urinary bladder was tubular with small capacity and an absent trigone. Although the vagina was capacious, no ureteric orifices were found. Computed tomography corroborated the diagnosis of bilateral, single ectopic ureters draining into a grossly dilated vagina. This case is unique because it is a bilateral single-system ureteral ectopia in a completely differentiated female genital tract that presented late in adolescence. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second such ureteral abnormality reported in the literature so far. The patient underwent ileocystoplasty with right ureteric reimplantation and nephroureterectomy for the left nonfunctional kidney, which histopathology showed to be tuberculosis. The patient is continent with cystometric capacity of more than 300 mL.
Adolescent
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Female
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Humans
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Kidney
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Ovary
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Parturition
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Replantation
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Tuberculosis
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Ureter
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Urethra
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Urinary Bladder
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Uterus
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Vagina