Reflex anuria (RA) is a rare cause of abrupt reduction of urine output following trauma, irritation, or painful stimuli to the kidneys, ureters, or surrounding organs. The mechanism of RA is a reflex spasm of both ureters and/or renal arterioles. It is a well-documented complication of colorectal surgeries and gynecological surgeries which involve placement of a ureteric stent for ureteric identification and prevention of injury. RA and post-renal obstruction can both be complications of intraperitoneal hyperthermic chemotherapy (HIPEC) in patients who are undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer and peritoneal carcinomatosis. HIPEC procedure can lead to inflammation of the entire abdomen, including the ureters. This inflammation can result in hematuria that can form clots along the urinary tract and cause post-renal obstruction. The inflammation can also result in RA. It is essential to maintain high urine output during the early postoperative period to prevent clots and the ensuing post renal obstruction. It is also important to identify RA and maintain a low threshold to treat it by placing ureteric stents even in the absence of overt bilateral hydronephrosis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.20269 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
April 2024
Department of Urology, Concord Hospital - Laconia, Laconia, USA.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent finding in acutely ill and hospitalized patients arising from various etiologies. Anuric AKI, a more pronounced form of AKI in which less than 100 cc of urine is produced per day, is most frequently encountered in hospitalized, septic, and post-surgical patients, often secondary to shock or bilateral urinary tract obstruction. The development of anuric AKI in previously healthy patients after outpatient urological procedures presents a unique challenge to physicians, as many outpatient procedures require the routine perioperative administration of multiple nephrotoxic medications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Rep Urol
December 2023
Sir Charles Gardiner Hospital, Department of General Surgery, Perth, WA, Australia.
Here we present two cases of post-operative obstructive renal failure following major abdomino-pelvic sarcoma surgery. In both cases, prophylactic ureteric stents were inserted to aid the identification and protection of the ureters during resection of these complex retroperitoneal masses. In case one, obstructive renal failure occurred following ureteric stent removal on day 0 post-operatively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2021
Anesthesiology, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA.
Reflex anuria (RA) is a rare cause of abrupt reduction of urine output following trauma, irritation, or painful stimuli to the kidneys, ureters, or surrounding organs. The mechanism of RA is a reflex spasm of both ureters and/or renal arterioles. It is a well-documented complication of colorectal surgeries and gynecological surgeries which involve placement of a ureteric stent for ureteric identification and prevention of injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
November 2021
Urology, Royal Surrey County Hospital, Guildford, GBR.
Reflex anuria is a rare phenomenon that is caused by trauma or irritation to one kidney or ureter. It has been described in unilateral ureteric obstruction and after surgical procedures involving the ureters and bladder. Here we present a case of a 33-year-old female, presenting with right-sided loin to groin pain, which eventually lead to oliguria and required bilateral nephrostomies as retrograde stent insertions failed.
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