Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Cases of giant hydronephroses are rare and usually contain no more than 1–2 litres of fluid in the collecting system. We report a remarkable case of giant hydronephrosis mimicking a progressive malignant abdominal tumour.</p> &...

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Main Authors: Heidenreich Axel, von Knobloch Rolf, Anderer Georgia, Schrader Andres, Hofmann Rainer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2003-10-01
Series:BMC Urology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2490/3/4
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spelling doaj-f93dd2e66c1e49cd9812d1345d4ab6e22020-11-25T00:25:07ZengBMCBMC Urology1471-24902003-10-0131410.1186/1471-2490-3-4Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancyHeidenreich Axelvon Knobloch RolfAnderer GeorgiaSchrader AndresHofmann Rainer<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Cases of giant hydronephroses are rare and usually contain no more than 1–2 litres of fluid in the collecting system. We report a remarkable case of giant hydronephrosis mimicking a progressive malignant abdominal tumour.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>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. Subsequently, 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. After extirpation another tumourous structure emerged in the pelvis originating from the genital organs and was also resected. 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.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Although both clinical symptoms and the enormous size of the tumour indicated malignant growth, it turned out to be a giant hydronephrosis. Presumably, a chronic obstruction of the distal ureter had caused this extraordinary hydronephrosis. As demonstrated in our case, an accurate diagnosis of giant hydronephrosis remains challenging due to the atrophy of the renal parenchyma associated with chronic obstruction. Therefore, any abdominal cystic mass even in the absence of other evident pathologies should include the differential diagnosis of a possible hydronephrosis. Diagnostic accuracy might be increased by a combination of endourological techniques such as retrograde pyelography and modern imaging modalities.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2490/3/4chronic hydronephrosisureter obstructionkidney cancerovarian neoplasm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heidenreich Axel
von Knobloch Rolf
Anderer Georgia
Schrader Andres
Hofmann Rainer
spellingShingle Heidenreich Axel
von Knobloch Rolf
Anderer Georgia
Schrader Andres
Hofmann Rainer
Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
BMC Urology
chronic hydronephrosis
ureter obstruction
kidney cancer
ovarian neoplasm
author_facet Heidenreich Axel
von Knobloch Rolf
Anderer Georgia
Schrader Andres
Hofmann Rainer
author_sort Heidenreich Axel
title Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
title_short Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
title_full Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
title_fullStr Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
title_full_unstemmed Giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
title_sort giant hydronephrosis mimicking progressive malignancy
publisher BMC
series BMC Urology
issn 1471-2490
publishDate 2003-10-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Cases of giant hydronephroses are rare and usually contain no more than 1–2 litres of fluid in the collecting system. We report a remarkable case of giant hydronephrosis mimicking a progressive malignant abdominal tumour.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>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. Subsequently, 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. After extirpation another tumourous structure emerged in the pelvis originating from the genital organs and was also resected. 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.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Although both clinical symptoms and the enormous size of the tumour indicated malignant growth, it turned out to be a giant hydronephrosis. Presumably, a chronic obstruction of the distal ureter had caused this extraordinary hydronephrosis. As demonstrated in our case, an accurate diagnosis of giant hydronephrosis remains challenging due to the atrophy of the renal parenchyma associated with chronic obstruction. Therefore, any abdominal cystic mass even in the absence of other evident pathologies should include the differential diagnosis of a possible hydronephrosis. Diagnostic accuracy might be increased by a combination of endourological techniques such as retrograde pyelography and modern imaging modalities.</p>
topic chronic hydronephrosis
ureter obstruction
kidney cancer
ovarian neoplasm
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2490/3/4
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