UPJO and VUR Flashcards

1
Q

What is Ureteopelvic junction obstruction (UPJO)?

A

Restriction to the flow of urine from the renal pelvis to the ureter, which if left uncorrected will lead to progressive renal deterioration and complete loss of affected kidney

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2
Q

Is the UPJO congenital or acquired?

A

It is mainly congenital condition that can be detected by antenatal ultrasound during the second trimester

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3
Q

The flow of urine from the renal pelvis to the ureter depends on two main factors

A

firstly, the pressure within the renal pelvis and its compliance

Secondly, the peristaltic activity of the ureter (the main cause of congenital ureteropelvic junction obstruction)

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4
Q

What is ureterocele

A

It is a cystic dilation of the terminal ureter between the superficial and deep layers of the trigone that may be ectopic or intravesical

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5
Q

Ureterocele is more common in females or males?

A

More common in females (4:1 ratio)

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6
Q

80% of all ureterocele arise from which pole of duplicated system

A

From the upper poles

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7
Q

Single system ureteroceles are sometimes called ————-

A

Simple ureteroceles

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8
Q

Simple ureteroceles are usually found in

A

Adults

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9
Q

What are the complications of large Ureterocele?

A

Obstruction of the bladder neck or contralateral ureteral orifice resulting in hydronephrosis of the collecting system

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10
Q

Diagnosis of Ureteroceles

A

1-sonography

2-excretory urography often demonstrates the characteristic cobra head deformity an area of increased density, similar to the head of a cobra with hello or less dense shadow around it

3-cystogrphy demonstrates the ureterocele in the bladder. It appears as a smooth, broad-based filling defect located near the trigone

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11
Q

Treatment of ureterocele

A

Endoscopic treatment:
By incising the ureterocele at the base

Surgical treatment:
Excision and re-implantation of the ureter

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12
Q

What is Vesicouretric Reflux (VUR)?

A

Is the retrograde flow of urine from the bladder into the upper urinary tract with or without dilation of the ureter, renal pelvis and calyces. It can cause symptoms and may lead to renal failure.

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13
Q

70% of infants who present with UTIs have VUR

A

🙂

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14
Q

The vast majority of VUR occurs in males or females?

A

85% of reflux occurs in females

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15
Q

Why siblings of patients with reflux are at much greater risk of having reflux than the normal population

A

Because Vesicoureteric Reflux is the most common inherited anomaly of the genital urinary tract

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16
Q

Physiology of vesicoureteric junction during emptying

A

The distal part of the ureter is continuous with the bladder obliquely, creating an orifice that remains closed due to its obliquity,
The ureteric peristalsis cause a rise in the ureteric pressure, which opens the orifice momentarily to propel urine into the bladder,
After you were in propulsion, the ureter loses its pressure and intravesical pressure rise, closing the intramural part of the ureter

17
Q

Causes of VUR

A

Decreased intramural ureteric length to ureteric diameter ratio 5:1

Or

Ectopic ureteric opening

18
Q

VUR of childhood tends to resolves with increasing age

A

Because, as the bladder grows the intramural ureter lengthens

19
Q

etiology of VUR

A

🟢Primary
Congenital anomaly, resulting in too short intramural ureter
🟢Secondary
Bladder outlet obstruction (BPH, urethral stricture,)
Poor bladder compliance ()
🟢Iatrogenic (following incision of a ureterocele, inflammatory conditions, such as TB, schistosomiasis, UTI)

20
Q

Clinical presentation of VUR

A

🟢UTI symptoms
🟡Loin pain associated with full bladder or immediately after micturition
🟣Failure to thrive in newborns

21
Q

High index of suspicion of VUR

A

Recurrent UTI, or low in pain for many years before seeking medical advice

22
Q

Management of VUR

A

Low dosage, prophylactic antibiotic therapy until resolution of reflux

Improving toilet hygiene and bladder emptying by means of timed voids, double voiding, proper, perineal wiping and elimination of constipation

Anticholinergics for bladder dysfunction

Periodic urine cultures, every three months looking for infections