| Literature DB >> 34277172 |
Olivia Antonescu1, Melanie Duhamel2, Brian Di Giacinto3, James Spain1.
Abstract
Spontaneous renal hemorrhage is an uncommon entity with potentially serious consequences. We present a 68-year-old female with a three-day history of progressively worsening left-sided flank pain due to spontaneous left renal hemorrhage without a history of trauma or anticoagulation. The patient's symptoms improved with conservative management and she was discharged after several days of observation. However, the patient was readmitted the next day with progressively worsening pain due to hematoma expansion from active extravasation. On the second admission, interventional radiology successfully embolized the affected vessels and the patient improved rapidly. The hematoma decreased in size on follow-up exams but no etiology was discovered. Early arterial embolization may have improved outcomes in this case and we argue that it should be considered early in the management of all patients with spontaneous renal hemorrhage.Entities:
Keywords: interventional radiology; spontaneous renal hematoma; spontaneous renal hemorrhage; transcatheter arterial embolization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34277172 PMCID: PMC8269974 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.15547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Coronal reconstruction of portal venous phase contrast-enhanced CT abdomen and pelvis demonstrates acute hemorrhage at the superior pole of the left kidney with active extravasation.
Figure 2Digital subtraction angiography of the left renal artery demonstrates active extravasation from a subsegmental artery supplying the superior pole.
Figure 3Digital subtraction angiography of the left renal artery demonstrates coil embolization of the bleeding vessel with no residual bleeding evident.
Figure 4Coronal reconstruction of nephrogenic phase contrast-enhanced CT abdomen and pelvis one year following embolization demonstrate partial resorption of the left upper pole spontaneous renal hemorrhage. No renal mass is identified.
Figure 5Suggested algorithm for evaluation of spontaneous renal hemorrhage.
Hgb = Hemoglobin; CT = computed tomography; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging