| Literature DB >> 24868342 |
Tae Nam Kim1, Chan Ho Lee1, Do Hoon Kong1, Dong Kil Shin1, Jeong Zoo Lee1.
Abstract
A 29-year-old woman with mild back pain when coughing and suprapubic discomfort after voiding was admitted to Pusan National University Hospital. Two weeks earlier, she had undergone a hysterectomy and right-sided ureteroneocystostomy for uterine atony and right ureteral injury with bladder rupture. Computed tomography showed that a ureteral J stent extended from the right ovarian vein to the right cardiac chamber. The stent was retrieved via both femoral veins with a snare loop and pigtail catheter. Computed tomography showed that the urinary and vascular tracts were normal 5 months after the procedure.Entities:
Keywords: Foreign-body migration; Heart; Stents
Year: 2014 PMID: 24868342 PMCID: PMC4026664 DOI: 10.4111/kju.2014.55.5.360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Urol ISSN: 2005-6737
FIG. 1(A) Intravenous urogram revealed the double J stent extruding from the urinary tract (white arrows). (B) Computed tomographic kidney, ureter, and bladder revealed the proximal end of the stent located in the right cardiac chamber (C) through the inferior vena cava (white arrow).
FIG. 2(A) The snare loop (white arrow) and pigtail catheter (black arrow) were inserted into the intravenous pyelogram. (B) The distal end of the ureteral J stent (white arrow) was successfully caught and pulled downward.