Journal article
Renal Artery Stenosis due to Entrapment
Annals of vascular surgery, Vol.87, pp.31-39
11/01/2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.avsg.2022.07.012
Abstract
BACKGROUNDCommon etiologies of renovascular occlusive disease include atherosclerosis disease, developmental fibrotic conditions such as fibromuscular dysplasia, and vasculitis. Extrinsic compression of the renal artery is a rarely reported phenomenon but can lead to similar clinical manifestations. METHODSWe report recent experience with 2 patients who presented with extrinsic renal artery compression due to entrapment. Diagnosis was made with a constellation of findings on computed tomography angiography, dynamic duplex sonography, and catheter angiography. Both patients had hypertension and 1 had downstream subsegmental renal infarcts. The patients, both with right-sided renal artery entrapment, were treated with open surgical decompression. Exposure was achieved via extended Kocher maneuver followed by mobilization of the right kidney and, in 1 patient, detachment of the right lobe of liver to allow circumferential exposure of the proximal right renal artery to the aorta. All entrapping tissue was circumferentially released. RESULTSBoth operations were uncomplicated. Intraoperative sonography was used to confirm luminal patency of the released segments. Follow-up of renal artery duplex in both patients demonstrated resolution of dynamic compression. Renal artery peak systolic velocity and accelerations indices were all within normal limits. In both patients, improvement in blood pressure control was noted and discontinuation of anticoagulation was possible in the patient who had recurrent episodes of renal infarct. CONCLUSIONSExtrinsic compression of renal artery by diaphragmatic crura is rare but should be considered in younger patients or otherwise any patients with no vascular risk factors when renovascular hypertension workup yields no demonstrable intrinsic disease. A high index of suspicion should be raised when an anomalously high origin of the renal artery or proximity to the diaphragmatic crura is seen on cross-sectional imaging. Work-up should include dynamic imaging to assess compression of renal arteries during expiration. Open surgical or laparoscopic decompression of the involved renal arteries can be curative.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Renal Artery Stenosis due to Entrapment
- Creators
- Dongjin Suh - University of Iowa Hospitals and ClinicsVictor H HatcherJohn MuhonenDaniel KatzGraeme PitcherMel J Sharafuddin
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Annals of vascular surgery, Vol.87, pp.31-39
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.avsg.2022.07.012
- ISSN
- 0890-5096
- eISSN
- 1615-5947
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 11/01/2022
- Academic Unit
- Radiology; Stead Family Department of Pediatrics; Surgery; Injury Prevention Research Center
- Record Identifier
- 9984322800102771
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