Journal List > Korean J Urol > v.49(2) > 1005059

Hwang, Cheon, Moon, Lee, Choo, Hwang, and Park: Renal Ruptures with Active Bleeding Treated with Emergency Selective Renal Arterial Embolization

Abstract

Selection of a treatment modality for traumatized renal rupture depends on the renal injury grade, hemodynamic stability, combined organ injury, and the physician's experience. Treatment for renal injury tends to be conservative to maintain renal function and lessen the morbidity of surgery. If renal injuries were well-staged and selected by radiologic evaluation, hemodynamically stable patients with significant injuries (grades II through V) can usually be managed without surgical exploration. We report 3 cases of grade 4 renal injuries successfully treated with selective renal arterial embolization.

Figures and Tables

Fig. 1
A 34-year-old woman. (A) and (B) show active bleeding at the injured kidney, suggesting grade IV renal injury on CT scan. (C) shows pseudoaneurysm and blood extravasation suggesting, active bleeding of the kidney on angiography. (D) shows the picture that there was no extravasation after selective embolization.
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Fig. 2
A 41-year-old man. (A) and (B) show active bleeding at the injured kidney, suggesting grade IV renal injury on CT scan. (C) shows pseudoaneurysm and blood extravasation suggesting, active bleeding of the kidney on angiography. (D) shows the picture that there was no extravasation after selective embolization.
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Fig. 3
A 16-year-old boy. (A) and (B) show active bleeding at the injured kidney, suggesting grade IV renal injury on CT scan. (C) shows pseudoaneurysm and blood extravasation, suggesting active bleeding of the kidney on angiography. (D) shows that there was no extravasation after selective embolization.
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