z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Circumcaval Ureter with Vesico Ureteral Reflux: The First Association in Literature
Author(s) -
İlhan Çiftçi,
Mehmet Balasar,
Ahmet Tekın,
Seza Apilioğulları,
Talat Yurdakul
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
archives of clinical and experimental surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2146-8133
DOI - 10.5455/aces.20120304121548
Subject(s) - reflux , medicine , ureter , urology , association (psychology) , psychology , disease , psychotherapist
A circumcaval ureter is a rare congenital anomaly in which the ureter passes behind, and is compressed by, the inferior vena cava. Its etiology is assumed to be abnormal embryologic development of the inferior vena cava as a result of atrophy failure of the right subcardinal vein in the lumbar portion. A circumcaval ureter is also termed a retrocaval ureter. The right supracardinal system fails to develop, whereas the right posterior cardinal vein persists. With one reported exception, the anomaly always occurs on the right side. Patients with this anomaly may develop partial right ureteral obstruction or recurrent urinary tract infections. Therapeutic options include surgical relocation of the ureter anterior to the cava. A 14-year-old female patient came with complaints of fever, intermittent colic and dysuria 4 years ago. A right ureteric fourth-grade VUR and circumcaval ureter were established. An anomaly in which both of these are together could not be found in literature. If after the VUR treatment he has progressive abdomen pain and advancing hydronephrosis, a circumcaval ureter as an additive anomaly must not be forgotten. For that reason, in a patient having a urinary system anomaly, a likely extra anomaly should be searched. [Arch Clin Exp Surg 2012; 1(3.000): 191-194

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here