We examined 80 patients with acute obstructive anuria by ultrasound (US). Four of the 80 patients did not have dilatation of the urinary tract. In all four cases, antegrade pyelography guided by real-time US demonstrated urinary tract obstruction after the four patients had experienced 4, 5, 8, and 34 days of anuria, respectively. Diuresis occurred as a result of percutaneous nephrostomy in all four cases. Three of the patients were successfully treated by percutaneous techniques alone. Our findings demonstrate that even a complete and long-term obstruction of the urinary tract does not necessarily induce dilatation in the upper part of the tract. In such cases, only the direct opacification of the urinary tract can help confirm that the obstruction is present. Even in the absence of dilatation, antegrade pyelography guided by real-time US is a possible diagnostic method and can be the first step in the performance of percutaneous nephrostomy.
We treated 40 patients with urinary fistulas by interventional radiology. The antegrade percutaneous route, catheterization of the ureter and bypassing of the fistula enabled ureteral stenting in 36 patients (90 per cent). Criteria for successful treatment were healing of the fistula, normal renal function (evaluated by excretory urography and radionuclide studies) and absence of secondary stenosis at 6 months. Of the patients 28 (70 per cent) were treated successfully. The number of nephrectomies after failure of percutaneous techniques (5 of 40, or 12.5 per cent) seems lower than in the case of surgery. The results were excellent for fistulas occurring after endourology (all 9 successful) or after ureterointestinal anastomoses (7 of 8). On the other hand, the results appear disappointing in patients with fistulas in transplanted kidneys (3 of 4 failures).
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