Cystic Diseases of the Kidney

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Cystic Diseases of the Kidney Dr. Raid Jastania

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Cystic Diseases of the Kidney. Dr. Raid Jastania. Objectives. By the end of this session the students should be able to: List the common causes of renal cysts List the types of polycystic kidney disease List the types of renal stones and their implications - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Cystic Diseases of the Kidney

Page 1: Cystic Diseases of the Kidney

Cystic Diseases of the Kidney

Dr. Raid Jastania

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Objectives

• By the end of this session the students should be able to:– List the common causes of renal cysts– List the types of polycystic kidney disease– List the types of renal stones and their

implications– Understand the pathogenesis of hydronephrosis

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Case Presentation

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• A 40-year-old Chinese man underwent surveillance ultrasonography (US) of the kidneys. He was suffering from chronic renal failure and was on regular haemodialysis for the past six years. The patient was otherwise asymptomatic and his dialysis program was unremarkable.

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• US scans showed a largely cystic lesion at the lower pole of the right kidney . However, there was a suspicious solid component at the rim of the lesion. Previous US scan performed 6 years ago revealed bilateral small and atrophic kidneys.

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• Unenhanced CT scan showed a low-density lesion at the lower pole of the right kidney, with a small spike of calcification at its margin.

• After contrast injection, the lesion was found to be predominantly cystic, but an enhancing solid component was noted at the rim of the cystic wall. Other CT sections confirmed the presence of bilateral atrophic kidneys with multiple cystic changes, compatible with acquired cystic disease of the kidney.

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• The patient underwent radical nephrectomy and he made an uneventful recovery.

• Histopathological examination confirmed a renal cell carcinoma in a background of acquired cystic disease of the kidney.

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Back to:Cystic Diseases of Kidney

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Cystic Diseases of the Kidney

• Hereditary

• Developmental

• Acquired

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Simple cyst

• Simple or multiple

• Usually cortical

• 1-5 cm

• Smooth surface

• Incidental finding

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Dialysis-Associated acquired cyst

• End-stage kidney, on hemodialysis

• Cortex and medulla

• May cause hematuria

• Increased risk of tumors

• Occasional adenoma, and renal cell carcinoma

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Adult Polycystic kidney

• Autosomal dominant– PKD1 (polycystin-1) on Chromosome 16– 90% of cases– Cell-cell, cell-matrix adhesion molecule– Both alleles must be lost (second somatic hit)– PKD2 (polycystin-2) on chromosome 4, 10% of cases

• Multiple expanding cysts• Destruction of renal parencyma• 10% of chronic renal failure cases

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Adult polycystic Kidney

• Morphology:– Large up to 4 kg– Masses of cysts– Filled with fluid, clear, turbid, hemorrhagic– Micro:

• Cysts lined by single cuboidal epithelium

• Atrophy of the kidney

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Adult polycystic Kidney

• Clinical:– Present in the 4th decade– Flank pain– Mass– intermittent hematuria– Hypertension– Infection– Association: berry aneurysm of brain, cysts in liver,

pancreas, others. Diverticular disease.– Slow progression– End stage kidney at age of 50y

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Childhood polycystic kideny

• Autosomal recessive, chromosome 6• Perinatal, neonatal, infantile, juvenile• Pulmonary and renal failure• Multiple cysts, uniform lining (collecting

tubules)• Association

– Multiple cysts in the liver– Congenital hepatic fibrosis

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Dysplastic Kidney

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Case Presentation

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• A 52 year old man presented for evaluation of left flank pain of 1 year duration. He was nonsmoker with a history of left nephrolithotomy for staghorn calculus 20 years back. He had hypertension and ischemic heart disease as co-morbid conditions.

• On clinical examination patient had a scar of left flank incision with a palpable hard kidney. His urine analysis showed microscopic hematuria and culture was sterile. His renal biochemistry was normal.

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• On renal ultrasound a staghorn calculus was detected without associated hydronephrosis. Patient underwent transperitoneal laparoscopic nephrectomy. During surgery there were dense perirenal adhesions especially near the hilum. The hilar lymph nodes were also enlarged and densely adherent to the renal vessels. The procedure was electively converted to open surgery via flank incision. The total operating time was 5 hours and 20 minutes with estimated blood loss of 200 ml.

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• The patient had a smooth post-operative recovery.

• The histopathological examination of the specimen revealed presence of keratinizing type of squamous cell carcinoma of renal pelvis with metastasis to hilar lymph nodes. Patient was advised postoperative palliative chemo-radiotherapy. After six weeks of surgery patient developed fulminant herpes zoster and expired due to same.

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Back to Kidney Stones

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Urinary outflow obstruction

• Occur anywhere in the urinary system

• Renal stones: common

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Urinary outflow obstruction

• Occur anywhere in the urinary system

• Renal stones: common

• Pathogenesis– 1. 75% Ca oxalate, or Ca phosphate– 2. 15% Mg Ammonium Phosphate– 3. 10% Uric acid– 4. Rare cystine stones

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Renal stones

• Predisposing factors for Ca stones– 1. High urine concentration– 2. Hypercalcemia (hyperparathyroidism, vit. D

intoxication, sarcoidosis)– 3. Hypercalciuria– 4. High uric acid in urine– 5. hyperoxaluria

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Renal stones

• Predisposing factors for Mg Ammonium phospate stones:– Alkaline urine– Infections, specially proteus, staph

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Renal stones

• Predisposing factors for uric acid stones:– 1. Gout– 2. Hematologic malignancies eg. Leukemia

• Predisposing factor for cystine stone– 1. Genetic defect in renal transport system for

aminoacids

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Renal stones

• Morphology:– Unilateral 80%

– Occur in renal pelvis, calyces, bladder

– Staghorn stone: Mg ammonium phosphate

• Clinical– Asymptomatic, massive hydronephrosis

– Renal colic: flank pain, radiate to groin

– Gross hematuria

– infections

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Primary Oxalosis

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Case Presentation

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• A 78-year-old cachectic woman presented with an enormous abdominal tumour, which, according to the patient, had slowly increased in diameter. Medical history was unremarkable except for a hysterectomy >30 years before. A CT scan revealed a giant cystic tumour filling almost the entire abdominal cavity. It was analysed by two independent radiologists who suspected a tumour originating from the right kidney and additionally a cystic ovarian neoplasm.

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• A diagnostic and therapeutic laparotomy was performed: the tumour presented as a cystic, 35 × 30 × 25 cm expansive structure adhesive to adjacent organs without definite signs of invasive growth. The right renal hilar vessels could finally be identified at its basis.

• Another tumourous structure emerged in the pelvis originating from the ovary was also resected.

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• The histopathological examination revealed a >15 kg hydronephrotic right kidney, lacking hardly any residual renal cortex parenchyma.

• The second specimen was identified as an ovary with regressive changes and a large partially calcified cyst. There was no evidence of malignant growth.

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Back to:Hydronephrosis

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Hydronephrosis

• Dilatation of renal pelvis and calyces

• Atrophy of the renal parenchyma

• Caused by obstruction: partial, complete, unilateral or bilateral

• Causes– Congenital (hereditary, developmental)– Acquired

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Hydronephrosis

• Congenital– Atresia of urethra or ureter– Valve of urethra or ureter– Renal torsion– Kinking of ureter

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Hydronephrosis

• Acquired:– Foreign body: stone– Tumors: prostate, bladder– Inflammation: prostatitis, urethritis, ureteritis,

retroperitoneal fibrosis– Neurogenic: spinal cord damage– Pregnancy: mild, reversible

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Hydronephrosis

• Pathogenesis– Obstruction – high pressure – leak of fluid in

the interstitium – fluid back to lymphtics– High pressure – dilated collecting system –

defect in the function of the tubules – poor concentration of urine – polyuria

– Higher pressure – vascular stasis, congestion – decrease blood flow – decrease glomerular filtrate – renal insufficiency

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Hydronephrosis

• Pathogenesis– Irreversible damage occurs in 3 weeks of

complete obstruction– Or 3 months of partial obstruction

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Hydronephrosis

• Morphology:– Unilateral: large kidney (20cm)– Distended pelvis and calyces– Atrophy of the parenchyma– Hydronephrosis, hydroureters– If sudden and complete:

• Mild dilation

• Loss of renal function

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Hydronephrosis

• Micro:– Tubular dilatation, interstitial edema, mild

inflammation– Atrophy, fibrosis– Late glomerular damage– When sudden and complete: papillary necrosis– Infection is common

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Hydronephrosis

• Clinical:– Bilateral, complete – Anuria– Bilateral, incomplete – polyuria– Unilateral: detected late when both kidneys are

affected

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Objectives

• By the end of this session the students should be able to:– List the common causes of renal cysts– List the types of polycystic kidney disease– List the types of renal stones and their

implications– Understand the pathogenesis of hydronephrosis

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More Pictures

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