A Case of Right Renal Arteriovenous Malformation Mimicking the Symptoms of Urinary Tract Infection in the Emergency Department
- PMID: 31785842
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2019.10.015
A Case of Right Renal Arteriovenous Malformation Mimicking the Symptoms of Urinary Tract Infection in the Emergency Department
Abstract
Background: Renal arteriovenous malformation (AVM) is a rare cause of massive hematuria, and patients with renal AVM may present with symptoms like urinary tract infections in the emergency department.
Case report: A 37-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with symptoms of hematuria, urinary hesitancy, and severe suprapubic pain that had been present for a few hours. A urine examination revealed no pyuria, but urine occult blood for 3+ and a red blood cell count of >100 per high-power field. Bedside echocardiography revealed right kidney hydronephrosis and a distended bladder with a blood clot. A 3-way Foley catheter was inserted and drained 800 mL of bloody urine. A contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan was ordered that showed a 1.1-cm hypervascular tumor in the lower pole of right kidney, with active bleeding and rupture into the adjacent collecting system. Active renal tumor bleeding or renal AVM was suspected. The patient was transferred to a tertiary medical center where right renal artery angiography was arranged and disclosed an AVM with aneurysm formation at the right renal lower pole. Transarterial embolization was performed immediately to embolize the 3 feeders of the AVM. WHY SHOULD EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS BE AWARE OF THIS?: Renal AVM is a rare but potentially life-threatening cause of massive hematuria. Delayed or missed diagnosis is possible because renal AVM may present with symptoms like urinary tract infection, especially in young females. Renal artery angiography is the diagnosis of choice, and emergent transarterial embolization is now the standard of treatment.
Keywords: hematuria; renal arteriovenous malformation; renal artery angiography; transcatheter arterial embolization; urinary tract infection.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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