AI Article Synopsis

  • The increase in kidney stone cases can lead to serious complications, including kidney damage and potentially death due to infections.
  • A case involving a 40-year-old woman showed that undetected stones can result in severe hydronephrosis and infection, requiring multiple procedures for effective treatment.
  • Proper management of pyonephrosis is critical, as incomplete removal of infected material can lead to septic shock, necessitating urgent medical intervention before more invasive surgeries like nephrectomy.

Article Abstract

The prevalence of kidney stones continues to rise in modern times. Undiagnosed and/or mistreated, it can result in suppurative kidney damage and, in rare instances, death from systemic infection. We present the case of a 40-year-old woman who presented to the county hospital for sleight left lumbar pain, fever, and pyuria for about two weeks. Ultrasound and CT scan revealed a giant hydronephrosis with no visible parenchyma, secondary to a stone in the pelvic-ureteral junction. Although a nephrostomy stent was placed, 48 hours later the purulent content was not evacuated completely. She was referred to a tertiary center, where two more nephrostomy tubes were placed to completely evacuate approximately 3 L of purulent urine. Three weeks later, after the inflammation parameters normalized, a nephrectomy was performed with good outcomes. A pyonephrosis urologic emergency can develop into septic shock, demanding rapid medical attention to prevent potentially fatal outcomes. In some circumstances, percutaneous draining of a purulent collection may not be sufficient to remove the whole purulent mass. Before nephrectomy, all collections must be removed with further percutaneous procedures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10308315PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.39684DOI Listing

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