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Acute urinary retention secondary to giant prolapsed ureterocele in a young adult woman. Case report
Author(s) -
Roberto Villagómez-Camargo,
Marco Chopin-Gazga,
Jonathan Saucedo-Bravo,
Eugenio García-Cano,
Álvaro José Montiel-Jarquín
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cirugía y cirujanos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2444-0507
DOI - 10.1016/j.circen.2016.06.009
Subject(s) - medicine , ureterocele , surgery , cystoscopy , urinary retention , vesicoureteral reflux , urethra , asymptomatic , ureter , urinary system , reflux , disease
AbstractBackgroundUreterocele is a cystic dilation of the distal ureteral segment. The incidence in women ranges from 1/5000 to 1/12,000. In adults, they are poorly diagnosed and are asymptomatic. Prolapse through the urethra is uncommon, and involves acute urine retention and a reducible vulvar tumour.Clinical caseWoman of 24 years old, two previous caesarean and two abortions. She had incomplete bladder emptying, intermittent voiding, bladder straining and tenesmus, three months before admission. After the voiding effort she presented with acute urine retention with sudden onset of tumour in the vulva. The tumour was manually reduced under regional anaesthesia. A cystoscopy was performed, finding an ischaemic de-roofing of the anterior wall of the ureterocele, causing vesicoureteral reflux grade IV. Surgical correction was performed with Cohen re-implantation and insertion of a double-J catheter. The catheter was removed 30 days later, with a successful post-operative course.DiscussionIts aetiology is unclear, and most are diagnosed by ultrasound in the prenatal period. The clinical presentation is variable, from urinary tract infection to prolapse. Despite its size, it may cause complications such as ischaemic de-roofing, which if diagnosed soon may be resolved successfully, as with this patient.ConclusionThe results and treatment may be favourable when no renal impact or concomitant anatomical changes are present, as is the case of this patient

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