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Renal Artery Thrombosis May 5, 2009
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Outline Etiology Clinical Manifestations Differential Diagnosis Diagnosis Treatment Prognosis
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Etiology The most common cause of renal artery thrombosis is thromboembolic occlusion. Atrial fibrillation – left atrial thrombus Septic or aseptic valvular vegetations Paradoxical emboli Tumor emboli
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Etiology In situ thrombosis does occur, but less commonly Complication of progressive atherosclerosis in elderly patients Traumatic thrombosis – blunt trauma or deceleration injuries Inflammatory disorders or hypercoagulable states
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Clinical Manifestations Sudden onset abdominal or flank pain Fever Nausea, vomiting Hematuria Acute onset hypertension
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Laboratory Findings Elevated serum transaminases Elevated LDH Urinary lactate dehydrogenase Urinalysis – microscopic hematuria Elevated BUN and creatinine Elevated wbc count
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Differential Diagnosis Pyelonephritis Renal colic Mesenteric ischemia Cholecystitis Pancreatitis
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Diagnosis Renal arteriography CT scan MRA Duplex ultrasound
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Treatment Antihypertensive treatment Thrombolysis/Thrombectomy Anti-coagulation Surgery
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Prognosis Based on associated morbidity of patients
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References Goldman, Lee et al. Cecil Textbook of Medicine. Philadephia: Saunders, 2004. “Renal Artery Thrombosi.” UptoDate. 2009.
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