Angiomyolipomas are relatively frequent tumours of the kidney. It is believed that about 10 million people worldwide have such a tumour. About 1/10 of these 10 million are patients who suffer from tuberous sclerosis. The tumours are frequently bilateral, slow growing, and usually asymptomatic, as well as being rare in children. Due to the benign nature of angiomyolipomas, surgical treatment and embolisation of the tumours are generally not recommended, unless renal function is endangered, the symptoms are severe, or the kidney in question becomes completely dysfunctional. This is particularly the case in patients with tuberous sclerosis in whom these tumours are either already bilateral or may become so. We present a 24-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis in whom bilateral kidney tumours were diagnosed 7 years earlier and in whom we carried out a left nephrectomy of a 5300 gram angiomyolipoma, which caused pain and complete loss of function. Although tumourous, the right kidney was functional, so it was left untouched. After an uneventful recovery, a close follow-up was recommended, as well as HLA typing, as it is highly probable that the right kidney will gradually become inadequate or completely dysfunctional, so that haemodialysis and/or kidney transplantation along with nephrectomy will become necessary.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sarh0510433c | DOI Listing |
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