| Literature DB >> 35603113 |
Deeksha Bhalla1, Neha Dohare1, Priyanka Naranje1, Sana Shadab2, Dipankar Bhowmik2, Chandan J Das1.
Abstract
Hemorrhage is the most frequently encountered post renal biopsy complication; reported in 12% to 14% of patients. Although the vast majority of these are due to renal artery injury, involvement of gonadal arteries is also rarely seen. These may be managed by the endovascular route, which has several limitations in this subset of patients. We report a case of a 69-year-old male with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, who underwent renal biopsy and developed a testicular artery pseudoaneurysm (PA). Successful embolization of this PA was performed under ultrasound guidance using a direct percutaneous approach. This is the first such case reported in the literature. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Biopsy; embolization; hemorrhage; kidney
Year: 2022 PMID: 35603113 PMCID: PMC9121727 DOI: 10.4103/ijn.IJN_87_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Figure 1(a) Computed tomography (CT) angiography image shows the small contrast-filled outpouching (arrow) in the perinephric space at the level of midpole of kidney with surrounding hypodense hematoma. The artery of origin could not be delineated. A right renal cyst (*) is seen. (b)A large hematoma (arrow) is seen tracking inferiorly along the right psoas muscle (*). (c) In an enhanced CT done 1 year back, a small caliber vessel (arrow) was seen in perinephric space at the same level, as denoted by the renal cyst (*) (d) Sagittal reformatted image shows the origin of the vessel from the right renal artery; thus, it is the testicular artery (arrow)
Figure 2(a) Transverse ultrasonography (US) image of the right flank shows a focal anechoic lesion (arrow) in relation to the lower pole of the right kidney. (b) Color Doppler reveals “to and fro” pattern of color flow in the lesion (arrow). The adjacent hypoechoic hematoma is seen (*). The right ureter is also filled with echogenic material (solid arrow). (c) Spectral Doppler of the lesion reveals mixed forward and reverse flow. (d) A 22-gauge spinal needle was used to access the lesion. Needle tip is seen in situ (arrow). (e) On injection of 1 mL N-butyl cyanoacrylate, there was complete echogenic cast formation within the lesion (arrow). No residual anechoic component was seen
Summary of studies describing use of direct percutaneous approach for hemorrhagic complications post renal intervention
| Author | Year | Artery involved | Form of injury | Approach | Embolic agent | Success |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lal | 2009 | Renal artery | Post nephrolithotomy PA | US guidance | Thrombin | No |
| Sakr | 2009 | Renal artery | Post penetrating trauma, renal biopsy, nephrolithotomy PA | US guidance | Gelfoam | 92.9% |
| Gupta | 2008 | Renal artery | Post pyelolithotomy PA | Transcatheter embolization | Thrombin | Failure to cannulate feeding vessel |
| Siu | 2006 | Renal artery | Post renal transplant PA | US guidance | Thrombin | Central recanalization seen |
| Ramsay | 2002 | Lumbar artery | Pseudoaneurysm | US guidance | Thrombin | 100% |
PA, pseudoaneurysm; US, ultrasonography; NBCA, N-butyl cyanoacrylate