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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cats with ureter tears after blunt trauma treated by urinary diversion

By Dekerle, B et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2023·Department of Small Animal Surgery, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Feline ureteral rupture with para-ureteral urinomas following blunt trauma: clinical presentation and long-term outcome after treatment by urinary diversion for five cases from 2012 to 2019.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Five cats were treated for serious injuries after being hit by cars, which caused damage to their ureters (the tubes that carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder). About two weeks after the accidents, the cats showed signs of lethargy and had abdominal masses or urinary issues. They underwent surgeries to divert urine, with four cats receiving a special device to bypass the damaged ureter and one having a stent placed. Thankfully, all cats recovered well, with normal kidney function at their follow-up visits, although one cat needed additional treatment later due to a complication.

People also search for: cat urinary problems after trauma · cat kidney injury treatment · signs of cat ureteral rupture

Abstract

CASE HISTORY: Medical records were reviewed for cats that underwent surgical treatment of traumatic ureteral rupture (TUR) using urinary diversion procedures between 2012 and 2019. CLINICAL FINDINGS AND TREATMENT: Five cats had presented with injuries associated with road traffic accidents. These included three cats with abdominal hernias that required surgical management. At a median of 15 days after the accident, cats represented with lethargy, the presence of an abdominal mass or with lower urinary tract symptoms and in all cats contrast diagnostic imaging showed proximal unilateral TUR with associated para-ureteral urinoma. Four cats received subcutaneous ureteral bypass (SUB) device placement and one had ureteral anastomosis over a stent. Unilateral cyst-like retroperitoneal fluid consistent with para-ureteral urinoma was observed in all cats and a diffuse retroperitoneal haematoma was noticed in four cats. No immediate major complications occurred, and all cats had post-operative serum creatinine concentration within the reference interval. The cat that had received a ureteral stent subsequently required placement of a SUB following stent encrustation 15 months after surgery. Median follow-up time was 34 (min 28, max 58) months and renal function was normal in all cats at the last follow-up. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Urinary diversion procedures provided long-term stable renal function following proximal TUR in these five cats. Delayed, subtle non-specific clinical signs subsequent to high-energy blunt trauma causing abdominal hernia and associated diffuse retroperitoneal haematoma, should raise suspicion of TUR. ABBREVIATIONS: AFAST: Abdominal focused assessment with sonography for trauma; SUB: Subcutaneous ureteral bypass; TUR: Traumatic ureteral rupture.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36281557/