Introduction: Obstructive renal failure or obstructive uropathy is an entity defined by the simultaneous presence of impaired renal function and dilated urinary excretory pathways in medical imaging. It accounts for 2 to 10% of the causes of acute renal failure (ARF). The purpose of this work was to evaluate the prevalence of this condition in our department.
Method: This was a retrospective study conducted from January 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018 in the said department. The parameters studied were age, sex, etiology, type of renal failure, actions performed, surgical results of the procedure, creatinine level before and after management, and death rate.
Results: obstructive renal failure accounted for 7.32% of all hospitalizations during the study period. The sex ratio was 1.86 in favor of men. The average age was 48.99 ± 6.81 years with extremes of 7 and 102 years. The etiologies were dominated by lithiasis (43.4%). Renal failure was acute and chronic in 20.5% and 54.2% of cases, respectively. It was indeterminate in 25.3% of cases. The obstructive character of renal failure has been confirmed in medical imaging. Lithiases accounted for 43.4% of cases. For therapeutic management, our patients received urinary catheterization (38.6%), nephrostomy (34.9%), urological surgery (22.9%) and hemodialysis (22%). The evolution was favorable in 59% of the cases.
Conclusion: Obstructions of the upper urinary tract are becoming more frequent in our medical practice. They occur mainly in patients with lithiasis. There is a large proportion of kidney failure requiring hemodialysis.
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