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Intra‐ureteric capsaicin in loin pain haematuria syndrome: efficacy and complications
Author(s) -
Playford D.,
Kulkarni H.,
Thomas M.,
Vivian J.,
Low A.,
Mander J.,
Perlman D.,
Finch P.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
bju international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 1464-4096
DOI - 10.1046/j.1464-410x.2002.02966.x
Subject(s) - medicine , capsaicin , anesthesia , analgesic , nephrectomy , surgery , kidney , receptor
Objective  To evaluate the safety and efficacy of intra‐ureteric capsaicin for loin pain haematuria syndrome (LPHS). Patients and methods  In an open prospective pilot study, four middle‐aged patients (three women and one man) with LPHS resistant to therapies such as splanchnic nerve block, psychological treatment or renal autotransplantation (one) were assessed. An intra‐ureteric infusion of capsaicin (30 mg/100 mL of 30% alcohol in saline) for 30 min with bladder irrigation was administered under general anaesthesia, with a subsequent intravenous patient‐controlled narcotic analgesic pump for pain control. Double‐concentration capsaicin was used for second infusions, if necessary when the response to the earlier infusion was inadequate or incomplete. Results  The first patient had experienced reduced pain levels for the first 3 months only, with no benefit from the subsequent treatments with higher doses of capsaicin (60 mg). The second patient with recurrent pain in an autotransplanted kidney had no benefit from either a 30 or 60 mg capsaicin infusion a month apart, but developed a fibrotic stricture at the transplant pelvi‐ureteric junction, requiring pyelocystoplasty. The third patient with concurrent depression had no benefit from a 30‐mg infusion of capsaicin. The fourth patient experienced no pain relief from a 30 mg infusion of capsaicin but developed proteinuria secondary to mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis, ureteric inflammation needing stenting within 7 days of treatment and subsequently nephrectomy for a nonfunctioning kidney at 3 months. Conclusion  Intra‐ureteric capsaicin was neither effective nor safe in LPHS; the contribution of the alcohol diluent cannot be excluded.

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