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*First Department of Internal Medicine
Department of Urology, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan
A 43-year-old woman visited our internal medicine service for evaluation of painless gross hematuria of 2 months' duration. She was a nonsmoker with no significant medical history, abdominal trauma or recurrent urinary tract infection. Her body mass index was low (18 kg/m2). She was afebrile and normotensive, her abdomen and flanks were nontender, and no mass was palpated.
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The nutcracker phenomenon is a rare but important cause of hematuria.1 The left renal vein normally passes between the superior mesenteric artery and the aorta; however, in the nutcracker phenomenon, the vein is compressed in the angle created by the 2 arteries, which results in increased venous pressure and the development of collateral veins. Hematuria results when the increased venous pressure causes minute ruptures of the thin-walled septum separating the veins from the collecting system.2
One hypothesis for the narrowing of the aortomesenteric angle is a thin body build and decreased amounts of perirenal or mesenteric fat. Other hypotheses include posterior renal ptosis (movable kidney) with stretching of the left renal vein over the aorta, and abnormal branching of the superior mesenteric artery from the aorta.3 The prevalence of the phenomenon remains unknown. It usually occurs in adolescents and thin young women.
In addition to hematuria, clinical features may include flank and abdominal pain, orthostatic proteinuria, vulvar varices in females, and varicocele in males. The differential diagnosis of nonglomerular hematuria includes urinary tract neoplasms, calculi and infection. The "gold standard" for diagnosis has been invasive angiography and measurement of the renal vein pressure; however, helical CT scanning allows less invasive visualization of vascular branching. Conservative treatment with routine urinalysis has been proposed for mild hematuria, since the development of collateral veins may resolve the hypertension in the left renal vein and alleviate symptoms. Endovascular stenting or surgery (e.g., transposition of the left renal vein and renal autotransplantation) may be indicated for massive hematuria and abdominal pain.
References
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J. Dmitrieva and E. H. Dillon Vulvar Varicosities Presenting as Bilateral Vulvar Masses in Pregnancy Journal of Diagnostic Medical Sonography, November 1, 2006; 22(6): 387 - 390. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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