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INTERESTING IMAGES |
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Year : 2016 | Volume
: 31
| Issue : 3 | Page : 240-241 |
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Objective improvement in renal function post-Dietl's crisis: Documented on renal dynamic scintigraphy
Girish Kumar Parida, Madhavi Tripathi, Kunal Kumar, Nishikant Damle
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET/CT, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India
Date of Web Publication | 7-Jun-2016 |
Correspondence Address: Madhavi Tripathi Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET/CT, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi - 110 029 India
 Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None  | Check |
DOI: 10.4103/0972-3919.181527
Abstract | | |
Dietl's crisis is one of the treatable causes of intermittent abdominal pain. The pain is due to acute hydronephrosis that leads to stretching of the pelvis. The most common cause of this intermittent hydronephrosis is aberrant renal vessel at lower pole that causes pelvi-ureteric junction obstruction.(PUJO). High insertion of the ureter is one of the other rare causes. We present a case of 5-year-old boy with intermittent abdominal pain and distension with ultrasonography features of gross left hydronephrosis. Renal dynamic scan.(RDS) with ethylene dicysteine showed negligible functioning left kidney. On third follow-up day, the patient passed a lot of urine with decrease in abdominal pain and distension. Then, again the patient was sent to us 8.days after the first study for repeat RDS, which showed significant improvement in function and decreased in the size of left kidney though with persistent PUJO. On exploration high insertion of the ureter at pelvis was found to be the cause and was treated.
Keywords: Dietl's crisis, pelvi-ureteric junction obstruction, renography
How to cite this article: Parida GK, Tripathi M, Kumar K, Damle N. Objective improvement in renal function post-Dietl's crisis: Documented on renal dynamic scintigraphy. Indian J Nucl Med 2016;31:240-1 |
How to cite this URL: Parida GK, Tripathi M, Kumar K, Damle N. Objective improvement in renal function post-Dietl's crisis: Documented on renal dynamic scintigraphy. Indian J Nucl Med [serial online] 2016 [cited 2021 Mar 8];31:240-1. Available from: https://www.ijnm.in/text.asp?2016/31/3/240/181527 |
We present the case of a 5-year-old boy referred for renal dynamic scintigraphy (RDS) as a part of his workup for intermittent abdominal pain. On the 3rd day following the RDS, the child had a history of passing a lot of urine with a palpable decrease in the size of his abdominal lump. Keeping a working diagnosis of Dietl's crisis the pediatric surgeons referred the child for a repeat RDS. The scan documented an improvement in differential renal function of the hydronephrotic left kidney with a slight decrease in the size of the kidney. Drainage pattern however remained unchanged, and the child was fast tracked for a left pyeloplasty, which revealed huge hydronephrotic left kidney with high insertion of the ureter. Intermittent hydronephrosis (Dietl's crisis) is one of the treatable causes that leads to recurrent abdominal pain.[1],[2],[3] Josef Dietl in 1864 first reported this and described it as episodic, crampy upper abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting associated with intermittent obstruction at pelvi-ureteric junction (PUJ)[1] The most common cause for this is an aberrant vessel at the lower pole of kidney that causes kinking of the ureter at the PUJ.[4] In our case, the RDS pre- and post-Dietl's crisis [Figure 1] and [Figure 2], respectively] clearly demonstrated a recovery of renal function postcrisis (without intervention). This recovery indicated the need for surgical intervention and that relief in obstruction would result in good postoperative functional recovery.[5] Abnormal insertion of ureter results in high insertion PUJ obstruction. The ureter inserts into the renal pelvis in a high and often oblique manner, which can cause functional obstruction.[6] The greater the hydronephrosis the worse the obstruction in these cases (ureteral insertion resides higher on the renal pelvis, creating acute angulation).[7] | Figure 1: Renal dynamic scan images at pre-Dietl's crisis state. (a) Flow phase images with frame rate of 1 sec/frame, (b) uptake phase images with frame rate of 1 min/frame, (c) prevoid image just after dynamic study (d) delayed static image at 4 h postinjection
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 | Figure 2: Renal dynamic scan images at post-Dietl's crisis state. (a) Flow phase images with frame rate of 1 sec/frame, (b) uptake phase images with frame rate of 1 min/frame, (c) prevoid images just after dynamic study (d) delayed static images at 4 h postinjection
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Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
References | |  |
1. | Dietl J. Wandernde nieren and deren einklemmung. Wien Med Wochenschr 1864;14:153-66. |
2. | Ward HC, Brereton RJ. Pelviureteric junction obstruction and recurrent abdominal pain in childhood. Br J Surg 1989;76:818-9. |
3. | Belman AB. Ureteropelvic junction obstruction as a cause for intermittent abdominal pain in children. Pediatrics 1991;88:1066-9. |
4. | Flotte TR. Dietl syndrome: Intermittent ureteropelvic junction obstruction as a cause of episodic abdominal pain. Pediatrics 1988;82:792-4. |
5. | Harraz AM, Helmy T, Taha DE, Shalaby I, Sarhan O, Dawaba M, et al. Changes in differential renal function after pyeloplasty in children. J Urol 2013;190 4 Suppl:1468-73. |
6. | Grasso M, Caruso RP, Phillips CK. UPJ obstruction in the adult population: Are crossing vessels significant? Rev Urol 2001;3:42-51.  [ PUBMED] |
7. | Park JM, Bloom DA. The pathophysiology of UPJ obstruction. Current concepts. Urol Clin North Am 1998;25:161-9. |
[Figure 1], [Figure 2]
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