A 48-year-old female presented to her physician complaining of intermittent lower abdominal pain radiating to the right lower back. At the time of presentation, she was afebrile and denied any urinary symptoms such as dysuria, frequency or urgency. Physical exam was unremarkable, other than obesity, and her abdominal exam was noncontributory. Medical history, however, was notable for recurrent, Proteus mirabilis culture-proven urinary tract infections requiring antibiotic treatment for the prior three years along with hypertension, uterine fibroids post hysterectomy, diabetes and asthma. Complete blood count was within normal limits, and urine dipstick showed 1+ blood, 1+ protein and 2+ leukocytes. Full renal function labs, urine cytology, radioisotope renography and abdominopelvic CT scanning with contrast were all ordered and a laparoscopic right nephrectomy was recommended based on the results. The bisected right kidney is shown below in Figure 1. She was discharged home on post-operative day one and her follow up urology appointments indicate resolution of both her urinary tract infections and her abdominal pain.
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