Case of congenital ureteropelvic junction obstructive nephrolithiasis with acute urinary retention X-ray abdomen (KUB view)
Shubham Biswas, Devyani Dasar
Corresponding author: Shubham Biswas, Department of Shalyatantra, Mahatma Gandhi Ayurved College Hospital and Research Centre, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences, Sawangi, Wardha, Maharashtra, India
Received: 28 Jul 2022 - Accepted: 13 Aug 2022 - Published: 16 Aug 2022
Domain: General surgery, Urology
Keywords: Nephrolithiasis, obstructive uropathy, urinary retention
©Shubham Biswas et al. PAMJ Clinical Medicine (ISSN: 2707-2797). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Shubham Biswas et al. Case of congenital ureteropelvic junction obstructive nephrolithiasis with acute urinary retention X-ray abdomen (KUB view). PAMJ Clinical Medicine. 2022;9:37. [doi: 10.11604/pamj-cm.2022.9.37.36554]
Available online at: https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/9/37/full
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Case of congenital ureteropelvic junction obstructive nephrolithiasis with acute urinary retention X-ray abdomen (KUB view)
Case of congenital ureteropelvic junction Obstructive nephrolithiasis with acute urinary retention X-ray abdomen (KUB view)
&Corresponding author
A 36-year-old male patient was brought to casualty with complaints of colicky left sided flank pain, nausea, hematuria and difficulty in urination since 3 months. The patient came with no passage of urine since last 12 hours and sudden onset of pain. Per abdomen examination reveals tenderness at costovertebral angle with tachycardia and tachypnea. Patient was advised for X-ray abdomen KUB. Large left calculus in lower calyx with hydronephrosis as shown in (A) with mild tenderness over left flank. Catheterization was done. The patient was further advised for routine blood investigations, renal ultrasound, urine examination. The emergency surgery decision was taken on next day. Open pyelolithotomy with anderson-hynes pyeloplasty under general anesthesia was done. Post operatively patient was managed by Inj. Ceftriaxone 700 mg IV 12 hourly, Inj. Gentamycin 60 mg IV 8 hourly, Inj. Pantoprazole 40 mg IV 12 hourly and Inj. Neomol 1g IV 8 hourly. Liquid tolerated diet was advised to patient on post-operative day 2. Patient suggested to take very low calcium diet. After 7 days, patient's vitals was normal and shifted to normal diet and oral medication. The patient was advised to increase liquid diet and water intake. The final diagnosis was congenital ureteropelvic junction obstructive large (2.6 cm) nephrolithiasis with acute urinary retention, while the differentials included renal cell carcinoma, renal vein thrombosis, polycystic kidney disease.
Figure 1: AP view X-ray showing large obstructive left calculus in lower calyx with hydronephrosis