Topic 11
Topic 11
Topic 11
2. Clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of blunt renal damage. Indications for nonoperative
management of isolated renal injuries.
• Blunt renal damage
• Clinical presentation
• The best sign of blunt kidney injury is blood in the urine
(“hematuria”). Sometimes seen with the naked eye.
• Blunt trauma kidney injuries may show no outside signs. Or bruises may be seen over the back or
abdomen where
the kidneys are.
• Diagnosis-
• Computerized Tomography
• A computerized tomography (CT) scan with intravenous
(IV) contrast (a special dye) is the best way to assess kidney
injury.
• Ultrasound
• Ultrasound can also be used to diagnose kidney trauma.
•
• Intravenous Pyelogram
• Intravenous pyelogram (IVP) uses x-rays to show how dye
moves through your urinary system. IVP can show how the kidneys are working. The dye is injected
into a vein in your arm.
• Treatment-
• It depends on the condition of the patient, how bad the
kidney injury is, and if there are other injuries.—
• 1. If the patient is stable and there’s no injury to other organs, the trauma might be treated
without surgery. The patient will rest in the hospital until no more blood is seen in his/her urine.
• 2. If a patient isn’t stable and is losing a lot of blood from the kidney, surgery may be done.
• The aim of surgery is to fix and preserve the injured kidney. Sometimes a kidney is too badly
injured, so it may need to be removed
• 3. Today, Many serious injuries can be treated with minimally invasive techniques. Using
angiographic embolization. Using this method, surgeons can reach the arteries of the kidneys
through large blood vessels in the groin to stop bleeding.
•
3. Indications for different surgical measures of renal injuries.
• Indications for surgery of renal injuries.
• - Relative indications for surgery include devitalized renal
tissue with urinary leakage, coexisting bowel or pancreatic injuries, failed percutaneous or
endoscopic management of persistent urinary leakage, infected urinoma or perinephric abscess, and
failed angiographic management of renal vascular injuries.
4. Etiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of ureteral injuries.
• Ureteral damage -
• Causes
• - Duplication of the ureter
• - Ureterocele
• - Retroperitoneal fibrosis
• - An abnormality where the ureter connects to the bladder
or the kidney,
• Other possible causes
• Various causes inside (intrinsic) or outside (extrinsic) the
ureter can lead to ureteral obstruction, including:
• * Ureteral stones
• * Severe constipation, which happens primarily in children
but also occurs in adults
• * Cancerous and noncancerous tumors
• * Internal tissue growth, such as endometriosis in females
• * Long-term swelling of the ureter wall, usually due to
diseases such as tuberculosis or a parasite infection called
schistosomiasis
• Diagnosis
• 1.Blood and urine tests.
• 2.Ultrasound
• 3.Voiding cystourethrogram
• 4.Renal nuclear scan.
• 5.Cystoscopy
• 6,Computerized tomography (CT) scan
• 7.Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
• Treatment
• Drainage procedures recommended:
• * A ureteral stent,
• * Percutaneous nephrostomy,
• * A catheter,
• Surgical procedures
• * Endoscopic surgery,
• * Open surgery,
• * Laparoscopic surgery,
• * Robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery,
5. Treatment of the minor incomplete ureteral lacerations.
• . Ureteral lacerations treatment :
• - [ ] If a partial laceration is identified, it can be debrided
and primarily repaired over a stent. A major pelvic ureteral injury is managed with distal ureter
ligation and reimplantation into the bladder. This may require psoas hitch and/or Boari flap.
6. Bladder injuries, types, clinical presentation.
• Bladder injuries-
• Types- The two basic types of damage to the bladder by
trauma are bruises and tears.
• Blunt injury (a bruise) is damage caused by blows to the
bladder. Penetrating injury (a tear) is damage caused by
something piercing through the bladder.
• Symptoms
• * Blood in the urine in blunt trauma
• * Hard to start urinating
• * Weak urine stream
• * Painful urination
• * Fever
• Diagnosis
• If you have blood at the end of the penis or in the urine or
can’t pass urine after an injury to the urethral area, you
should see a health care provider right away.
• - Your health care provider may try to pass a tube ("catheter") through your urethra. Not being
able to pass a tube into the urethra is the first sign of urethral injury. An x-ray is done after squirting
a special dye into the urethra. The dye is used to be seen on an x-ray. X-rays are taken to see if any
of the dye leaks out of the urethra inside your body. This would mean there’s an injury. An x-ray of
the urethra is often done after a pelvic fracture, because urethral injury is common in these cases
(about 1 in 10
cases).
• Treatment-
• Many cases of anterior urethral injury need to be fixed right
away with surgery. Minor of these injuries can be treated with a catheter through the urethra into
the bladder. This keeps urine from touching the urethra so it can mend. The catheter is often left in
place for 14 to 21 days.
11. Make an examination order for suspected urethral and bladder injuries.
• . Examination order for urethral injuries:
• -Urethral injury should be suspected in the setting of pelvic
fracture, traumatic catheterization, straddle injuries, or any penetrating injury near the urethra.
Symptoms include hematuria or inability to void.
• Physical Examination
• Physical examination may reveal blood at the meatus or a
high-riding prostate gland upon rectal examination.
• Treatment
• For Serious Trauma
• For the rare cases where part of the penis has been
accidentally cut off, the amputated part should be wrapped in gauze soaked in sterile salt solution
and placed in a plastic bag. The plastic bag should then be put into a second bag or cooler with an ice
water slush. Do not place any amputated organ into ice water, as the water and direct contact with
ice is harmful to tissue. If the penis can be reattached, the lower temperature of the slush will
increase the chances of success. It may be possible to reattach the penis even after 16 hours.
• -For massive injuries to the penis, urologists, rebuild the penis.
• -The treatment for a penis “fractured” during sex is most often surgery.