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Therapy-resistant nephrolithiasis following renal artery coil embolization

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Author(s)
Poyet, Cédric
Grubhofer, Florian
Zimmermann, Matthias
Sulser, Tullio
Hermanns, Thomas
Keywords
Clinic for Trauma Surgery
Urological Clinic
610 Medicine & health

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/918829
Online Access
https://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-78556
Abstract
Background Transcatheter renal artery embolization is an effective and minimally invasive treatment option for acute renal bleeding. Early post-interventional complications include groin hematoma, incomplete embolization, coil misplacement and coil migration. Late complications are rare and mostly related to coil migration. Case presentation A 22-year-old woman with a history of recurrent stone disease and a lumbal meningomyelocele underwent bilateral open pyelolithotomy for bilateral staghorn calculi. Post-operatively, acute hemorrhage of the left kidney occurred and selective arterial coil embolization of a lower pole interlobular renal artery was performed twice. Four years after this intervention the patient presented with a new 15.4 mm stone in the lower calyx of the left kidney. After two extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy treatments disintegration of the stone was not detectable. Therefore, flexible ureterorenoscopy was performed and revealed that the stone was adherent to a partially intraluminal metal coil in the lower renal calyx. The intracalyceal part of the coil and the adherent stone were successfully removed using the holmium laser. Conclusion Therapy-resistant nephrolithiasis was caused by a migrated metal coil, which was placed four years earlier for the treatment of acute post-operative renal bleeding. Renal coils in close vicinity to the renal pelvis can migrate into the collecting system and trigger renal stone formation. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy seems to be inefficient for these composite stones. Identification of these rare stones is possible during retrograde intrarenal surgery. It also enables immediate stone disintegration and removal of the stone fragments and the intraluminal coil material.
Date
2013
Type
Journal Article
Identifier
oai:www.zora.uzh.ch:78556
http://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-78556
info:doi/10.1186/1471-2490-13-29
info:pmid/23758632
Copyright/License
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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