Includes 2020 AUA Guideline Notes on Urotrauma

See Original 2020 AUA Urotrauma Guidelines

See Lower Urinary Tract Trauma Chapter Notes

Trauma background

  • Leading cause of death in US population aged 1-44
  • Injuries are frequently classified as blunt vs. penetrating due to differences in management and outcomes
    • Blast injuries may be associated with both penetrating and blunt trauma, and are most common in the setts of violent conflict
  • Urologic organs are involved in ≈10% of abdominal traumas

Renal Trauma

Epidemiology

  • Most commonly injured GU organ in trauma

Pathogenesis

  • Kidneys are particularly prone to deceleration injuries (e.g. falls, motor vehicle collisions) because they are fixed in space only by the renal pelvis and the vascular pedicle
  • The pediatric kidney is believed to be more susceptible to trauma
    • Mechanisms owing to a decrease in the physical renal protective mechanisms found in children (4):
      1. Immature, more pliable thoracic cage
      2. Weaker abdominal musculature
      3. Less perirenal fat
      4. Sits in a lower abdominal position

Diagnosis and Evaluation

History and Physical Exam

History
  • Extent of deceleration involved in high-velocity impact trauma
    • Most important information in blunt renal injury
  • Trauma anterior vs. posterior to the axillary line
    • Trauma anterior to axially line is more likely to damage important renal structures such as the renal hilum and pedicle compared to the posterior axially line, which more commonly results in parenchymal injury
Physical Exam
  • Findings indicating possible renal injury (5):
  1. Flank hematoma
  2. Abdominal or flank tenderness
  3. Rib fractures
    • Ipsilateral rib fracture can increase the incidence of significant renal trauma by 3x
  4. Hematuria
    • The degree of hematuria and the severity of the renal injury do not consistently correlate; presence or absence of hematuria should not be the sole determinant in the assessment of a patient with suspected renal trauma
  5. Penetrating injuries to the low thorax or flank

Imaging

Indications
  • 2020 AUA Urotrauma Guidelines
    • Indications for imaging (contrast enhanced CT with immediate and delayed films) in stable trauma patients (5):
      1. Gross hematuria
      2. Microscopic hematuria and systolic blood pressure < 90mmHG
      3. Mechanism concerning for renal injury (e.g., rapid deceleration, significant blow to flank)
      4. Physical exam findings concerning for renal injury (e.g. rib fracture, significant flank ecchymosis)
      5. Penetrating injury of abdomen, flank, or lower chest
      • Generally, children can be imaged using the same criteria as adults. Children, however, often do not exhibit hypotension as adults do.
Modality
  • CT abdomen/pelvis with IV contrast (with immediate and delayed images) should be performed when there is suspicion of renal injury (AUA)
    • In children, ultrasound may be used, although CT is preferred
    • In rare cases where the patient is taken to the operating room without preliminary CT scan and surgeons are considering renal exploration or nephrectomy, an intraoperative one-shot IVP (2 mL/kg IV bolus of contrast with a single image obtained 10-15 minutes later) may be used to confirm that a contralateral functioning kidney is present
    • Major limitation of CT scan in renal trauma: inability to adequately define a renal venous injury adequately.
      • A medial hematoma strongly suggests a venous injury, however, there is no imaging modality which can accurately diagnose a venous injury
Findings
  • CT findings suspicious for significant renal injury include (6):
    1. Medial laceration
    2. Medial hematoma (vascular pedicle injury)
    3. Medial urinary extravasation (renal pelvis or ureteropelvic junction injury)
    4. Hematoma > 3.5cm
    5. Lack of contrast enhancement of the parenchyma (main renal arterial injury)
    6. Active intravascular contrast extravasation (arterial injury with brisk bleeding)
 
Axial CT scan with contrast, red arrow showing left renal artery injury with extravasation. Source
  • Differential diagnosis of fluid collections seen on serial imaging for renal trauma (3):
  1. Hematoma - density is almost always > 30 HU
  2. Urinoma - density ranges from 0-20 Hounsfield units (HU)
  3. Abscess - associated with rim enhancement; perinephric abscess rarely occurs after renal injury

Grading

AAST Grading

Grade Imaging criteria (CT findings)
I
  • Subcapsular hematoma and/or parenchymal contusion without laceration
II
  • Perirenal hematoma confined to Gerota fascia
  • Parenchymal laceration ≤1 cm depth without urinary extravasation
III
  • Parenchymal laceration >1 cm depth without collecting system rupture or urinary extravasation
  • Any injury in the presence of a kidney vascular injury (pseudoaneurysm or AV fistula) or active bleeding contained within Gerota fascia
IV
  • Parenchymal laceration extending into urinary collecting system with urinary extravasation
  • Active bleeding beyond Gerota fascia into the retroperitoneum or peritoneum
  • Renal pelvis laceration and/or complete ureteropelvic disruption
  • Segmental renal vein or artery injury
  • Segmental or complete kidney infarction(s) due to vessel thrombosis without active bleeding
V
  • Main renal artery or vein laceration or avulsion of hilum
  • Devascularized kidney with active bleeding
  • Shattered kidney with loss of identifiable parenchymal renal anatomy

*Advance one grade for bilateral injury up to grade III

 
What Grade of injury is this based on the AAST classification? Source

Management

  • Management of traumatic renal injuries has shifted from operative exploration to non-operative management in the vast majority of cases.
    • Non-operative management of the vast majority of blunt renal injuries is firmly established; non-operative management of penetrating and high-grade renal injuries remains debatable

Indications for intervention

  • 2020 AUA Urotrauma Guidelines
    • Approach based on based on hemodynamic stability
      • If hemodynamically stable: non-invasive management
        • Non-invasive management includes (4):
          1. Close hemodynamic monitoring
          2. Bed rest
          3. ICU admission
          4. Blood transfusion (when indicated)
          5. Imaging (when indicated)
            1. Indications for follow-up CT imaging (after 48 hours) in renal trauma patients (2):
              1. Clinical signs of complications (e.g., fever, worsening flank pain, ongoing blood loss, abdominal distention)
              2. Deep lacerations (AAST Grade IV-V)
                • AAST Grade IV-V renal injuries are prone to developing troublesome complications such as urinoma or hemorrhage
                • AAST Grade I-III injuries have a low risk of complications and rarely require intervention. Routine follow-up CT imaging is not advised for uncomplicated AAST Grade I-III injuries because it is not likely to change clinical management in these cases
        • Patients initially managed noninvasively may still require treatments (surgical, endoscopic, or angiographic) at a later time, especially those with higher grade injuries.
          • Factors associated with increased risk of bleeding and need for intervention in grade 3 and 4 injuries (3):
            1. Medial hematoma
            2. Hematoma > 3.5-4 cm in thickness
            3. Presence of a contrast extravasation from vessels on imaging
          • Although devitalized parenchyma has been suggested as a risk factor for development of septic complications, evidence supporting intervention for this radiographic finding is inconclusive
      • If hemodynamically unstable: immediate intervention (surgery or selective angioembolization)
        • Perform immediate intervention for hemodynamically unstable patients with radiographic findings of large perirenal hematoma (> 4 cm) and/or vascular contrast extravasation in the setting of deep or complex renal laceration (AAST Grade 3-5)
          • Perinephric hematoma size provides a rough radiographic estimate of the magnitude of renal bleeding, and increasing hematoma size has been incrementally associated with higher intervention rates.
        • Selected patients with bleeding from segmental renal vessels may benefit from angioembolization as an effective yet minimally invasive treatment to control bleeding
          • Selective embolization provides an effective and minimally invasive means to stop active bleeding from parenchymal lacerations and segmental arterial injury
          • Increasingly used in renal trauma
        • Patients who are hemodynamically unstable despite active resuscitation should be taken to the operating room rather than angiography
  • Campbell’s 11th edition
    • Indications for operative management
      • Absolute (4) 5PUPS:
        1. Suspected grade 5 injury (renal vascular pedicle avulsion)
        2. Expanding/Pulsatile renal hematoma (usually indicating renal artery laceration)
          • Some blunt and penetrating abdominal trauma may require laparotomy because of associated non-urologic injury, but even in these cases it is not necessary to explore the kidney additionally. However, exploration is needed in the case of a pulsatile and expanding retroperitoneal hematoma that suggests renal artery laceration
        3. UreteroPelvic junction disruption
        4. Hemodynamic instability with Shock
      • Relative indications (3):
        1. Renal injury together with colon/pancreatic injury
        2. Urinary extravasation with significant renal parenchymal devascularization
        3. Delayed diagnosis of arterial injury

Surgical management

  • Nephrectomy is a frequent result when hemodynamically unstable patients undergo surgical exploration
  • Approach: transabdominal
    • Allows complete inspection of intra-abdominal organs and bowel.
  • Principles of renal reconstruction after trauma include (8):
    1. Complete renal exposure
    2. Measures for temporary vascular control
      • Isolate the renal vessels before exploration to provide the immediate capability to occlude them if massive bleeding should ensue when the Gerota fascia is opened
    3. Limited debridement of nonviable tissue
    4. Hemostasis by individual suture ligation of bleeding vessels
    5. Watertight closure of the collecting system if necessary/possible
    6. Reapproximation of the parenchymal defect
    7. Coverage with nearby fascioadipose flaps (Gerota fascia or omentum) if feasible
      • The open parenchyma should be covered when possible by a pedicle flap of omentum. The rich vascular and lymphatic supply of the omentum promotes wound healing and decreases the risk for delayed bleeding and urinary extravasation.
    8. Liberal use of drains
  • For major renovascular injuries in patients with 2 kidneys, speedy nephrectomy is advocated
    • In rare instances in which vascular repair is technically feasible, renal salvage rates are disappointingly low
  • In damage control surgery, the area around the injured kidney is packed with laparotomy pads to control bleeding, with a planned return in approximately 24 hours to explore and evaluate the extent of injury.
    • This allows the cold, acidotic, and coagulopathic patient to be stabilized in the ICU before any attempt at potentially lengthy renal reconstruction is attempted.
  • In an unstable patient, if damage control is not an option, total nephrectomy would be indicated immediately when the patient’s life would be threatened by attempted renal repair.
  • Delayed renal bleeding can occur up to several weeks after injury but usually occurs within 21 days.

Special Scenarios

Renal injury with urinary extravasation
  • Persistent urinary extravasation can result in:
    1. Urinoma
    2. Perinephric infection
    3. Renal loss (rarely)
  • Stable patients where renal pelvis or proximal ureteral injury is not suspected: observation (AUA)
    • Parenchymal collecting system injuries often resolve spontaneously.
      • Urinary extravasation alone from a grade IV parenchymal laceration or forniceal rupture managed non-operatively has a spontaneous resolution of > 90%
  • Indications for intervention (4):
    1. Suspected injury to renal pelvis or proximal ureteral avulsion
      • Suggested by large medial urinoma or contrast extravasation on delayed images without distal ureteral contrast
      • Management is either endoscopic or open depending on the clinical scenario
    2. Urinoma increasing in size, purulence, or complexity on follow-up imaging
    3. Presence of complications such as fever, infection, increasing pain, ileus, or fistula.
    4. Severe renal injuries with continued urinary extravasation (not described in 2020 AUA Guidelines)
      • Placement of an internal ureteral stent for drainage may prevent prolonged urinary extravasation and decrease the chance of perirenal urinoma formation
  • Options for intervention
    1. Ureteral stent (preferred)
      • An internalized ureteral stent is minimally invasive and alone may provide adequate drainage of the injured kidney
      • A period of concomitant Foley catheter drainage may minimize pressure within the collecting system and enhance urinoma drainage
    2. Percutaneous urinoma drain, percutaneous nephrostomy, or both may also be necessary
Hypertension and Renal Trauma
  • Hypertension is rarely noted in the early postinjury period but can occur later.
  • Mechanisms for hypertension as a complication of renal trauma (4):
    1. Renal vascular injury, leading to stenosis or occlusion of the main renal artery or one of its branches (one-clip, Goldblatt kidney)
    2. Page kidney: compression of the renal parenchyma with extravasated blood or urine
    3. Post-trauma arteriovenous fistula
    4. Ureteral / UPJ obstruction[1]
      • In the first 3 scenarios, the renin-angiotensin axis is stimulated by partial renal ischemia, resulting in hypertension
  • Can be treated with (3):
    1. Anti-hypertensives
    2. Observation
    3. Nephrectomy (uncommonly)

Ureteral Trauma

Epidemiology

  • Rare, accounting for 1% of urologic injuries.

Pathogenesis

  • Acute ureteral injury results from (3):
    1. Iatrogenic injury (open surgery, laparoscopy, and endoscopic procedures)
    2. External violence from high-speed blunt mechanisms
      • The presence of massive force injuries in the patient with blunt trauma should always increase the level of suspicion for ureteral injury
    3. Penetrating stab and gunshot wounds
  • Iatrogenic injury
    • Procedures most commonly associated with iatrogenic ureteral injuries:
      • Hysterectomy (54%)
      • Colorectal surgery (14%)
      • Ovarian tumor removal (8%)
      • Transabdominal urethropexy (8%)
      • Abdominal vascular surgery
    • Compared to open surgery, ureteral injuries during laparoscopic surgery are less likely to be recognized immediately.
      • During laparoscopy/robotic surgery, a high index of suspicion for ureteral injury is required.
      • In open surgery, 1/3 of ureteral injuries are recognized immediately.
      • Intraoperative assessment of ureters
        • Some have advocated maneuvers to check the patency of the ureter after all surgeries in which ureteric injury is commonly reported (e.g., hysterectomy).
        • Options (3):
          1. Direct inspection
            • Purposefully opening the retroperitoneum before or after hysterectomy has been advocated to avoid ureteral injury or at least allow intraoperative detection.
          2. Retrograde pyelography
          3. Injection of 5-10 mL of IV methylene blue or indigo carmine dye followed by cystoscopy
            • Poor predictor of injury
            • Goal of cystoscopy is to document the absence of hematuria and the presence of bilateral ureteral jets
            • IV methylene blue and indigo carmine are generally considered to be benign drugs, but their use has resulted in patient deaths and fetal deaths when used in pregnant women.
              • Intravenous methylene blue
                • Standard 1% concentration used in clinical settings
                  • 1% = 1 g in 100 ml ( =1000mg in 100ml = 10mg in 1 ml)
                • Safe if used within therapeutic doses of <2mg/kg[2]
              • Adverse events
                • Intravenous
                  • Burning sensation
                  • Rash
                  • Abscess
                  • Necrosis
                  • Ulceration
                • Subcutaneous and intradermal
                  • Adverse skin reactions
                  • Superficial ulcers
                  • Abscess
              • Contraindications for IV methylene blue (3):[3]
                1. Pregnancy (potentially teratogenic)
                2. Use of selective (e.g., paroxetine, sertraline, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, citalopram) or nonselective (e.g., imipramine) serotonin (SSRI) and serotonin-norepinephrine (SNRI) reuptake inhibitors
                  • Methylene blue is a potent monoamine oxidase inhibitor and has caused deaths from serotonin toxicity in patients taking medications that increase serotonin levels
                3. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
                  • Causes methemoglobinemia and hemolysis
                4. Heinz body anemia
                5. Renal insufficiency
              • Contraindications for IV indigo carmine:
                1. Pregnancy
                • IV indigo carmine has been implicated in rare but serious cases of bronchospasm, bradycardia, hypertension, hypotension (most common), and anaphylactoid reactions.
          • Not effective methods
            • Intraoperative single-shot IVP
            • Intraoperative hydration or diuretic administration
              • Has been suggested to enhance ureteral visualization and potentially decrease the risk for injury
              • No data to support this method
            • Digital palpation of the ureter
              • Appears to be ineffective
            • Grasping the ureter with forceps to evoke ureteral peristalsis
              • Highly ineffective; should never be relied upon.
  • Endoscopic injury
    • Ureteroscopy should be performed alongside or over a wire placed up into the renal pelvis
    • Factors associated with higher complication rates during ureteroscopy (4):
      1. Longer surgery times
      2. Treatment of renal calculi
      3. Surgeon inexperience
      4. Previous irradiation
    • Persistence of stone basket attempts after recognition of a ureteral tear is a cause of ureteral injury during ureteroscopy.
      • When ureteral perforation is identified, stop the procedure and place a ureteral stent
  • Intraoperative ureteral manipulation
    • Common after aortoiliac and aortofemoral bypass surgery (12-20%) and may result in hydronephrosis
      • Management: course is benign in most; if symptomatic, can be treated with steroids
  • Ureteral contusion
    • Can occur in the context of a gunshot wound with blast injury
    • Complications may include delayed ureteral stricture and/or overt ureteral necrosis with urinary extravasation
  • Preoperative ureteral stenting
    • May increase intraoperative recognition of ureteral injury
    • A randomized trial demonstrated that prophylactic stenting does not reduce the risk of ureteral injury in women undergoing gynecologic surgery
    • Ureteral stents are not without complications

Diagnosis and evaluation

History and physical exam

  • Hematuria is a non-specific indicator of urologic injury
  • Significant ureteral injury can occur in the absence of hematuria
  • Post-operative signs and symptoms of missed ureteral injury (6):
    1. Flank pain
    2. Fever
    3. Leukocytosis
    4. Ileus
    5. Abdominal distention
    6. Urinary fistula

Imaging

  • Indications (contrast enhanced CT with 10 minute delayed films) for imaging (1) (AUA)
    1. Stable trauma patients with suspected ureteral injuries and not proceeding directly to laparotomy
    • If the initial delayed images do not adequately opacify the ureters, further delayed imaging may be necessary if ureteral injury is still suspected.
  • Findings suggestive of ureteral injury (4):
    1. Contrast extravasation
    2. Lack of contrast in the ureter distal to the suspected injury
    3. Ipsilateral delayed pyelogram
    4. Ipsilateral hydronephrosis

Other

  • Direct inspection during laparotomy in trauma patients with suspected ureteral injury who have not had preoperative imaging

AAST Grading

  • Grade I: contusion or hematoma without devascularization
  • Grade II: laceration with < 50% transection
  • Grade III: laceration with ≥ 50% transection
  • Grade IV: laceration with complete transection and < 2cm devascularization
  • Grade V: laceration with avulsion and > 2cm of devascularization

*Advance one grade for bilateral injury up to grade III

Management

  • Based on hemodynamic stability
    • If hemodynamically stable:
      • Traumatic ureteral lacerations should be repaired immediately
        • A longitudinal laceration is converted into a transverse one so as not to narrow the ureteral lumen (Heineke-Mikulicz procedure)
    • If hemodynamically unstable: temporary urinary drainage followed by delayed definitive repair
      • Options for temporary urinary drainage (4):
        1. Ureteral stent (internalized double J or exteriorized single J) only
        2. Short period of observation with a plan for reoperation when the patient is more stable, usually within 24 hours
        3. Exteriorize the ureter
        4. Tie off the ureter (with long silk sutures for easy identification at time of delayed repair) and plan percutaneous nephrostomy
        • Definitive repair of the injury should be performed when patient has improved/stabilized
  • Special scenarios
    • Ureteral contusion
      • Options, depending on ureteral viability and clinical scenario (2):
        1. Ureteral stenting
        2. Resection with primary repair
        • Indications for resection with primary repair (2):
          1. Severe or large areas of contusion
          2. Gun-shot related ureteric contusions
            • With a gun-shot related injury, excise devitalized tissue and an adjacent segment of normal-appearing ureter to eliminate late ischemia and stricture formation from the blast effect. Once both ends of the ureter have been adequately trimmed to healthy areas, mobilized, and correctly oriented, they are spatulated for ≈5-6 mm. Spatulation is performed for both ureteral segments at 180° apart
        • In ureteral contusions that do not appear to require excision/anastomosis, a ureteral stent should be placed; only truly minor injuries can go untreated, but the patients should be watched for signs of delayed urine leak.
    • Delayed diagnosis: ureteral stent
      • If ureteral stent placement unsuccesful or not possible (proximal ureter is completelely transected or patient instability preculdes attempts at retrograde placement), perform percutaneous nephrostomy with delayed repair
        • If nephrostomy alone does not adequately control the urine leak, options then include placement of a periureteral drain or immediate open ureteral repair
      • Indications for immediate repair for delayed diagnosis (within 1 week of injury) (2):
        1. Injury located near a surgically closed viscus, such as bowel or vagina
        2. Patient is being re-explored for other reasons
      • Campbell's 11th edition: postoperatively discovered injuries should be immediately repaired when detected within 72 hours.
    • Endoscopic injury: ureteral stent +/- percutaneous nephrostomy tube
      • Ureteral perforation during ureteroscopy can be treated by ureteral stenting, usually with no subsequent complications
      • If endoscopic or percutaneous procedures are not possible or fail to adequately divert the urine, open or laparoscopic repair may be performed.
    • Ureterovaginal fistula: ureteral stent
      • In females who undergo vaginal surgery (such as hysterectomy) or sustain penetrating pelvic trauma involving the vagina, an initially unrecognized ureteral injury can present in a delayed manner with ureterovaginal fistula.
      • Success rates range from64%-100% for ureterovaginal fistula who are initially managed with ureteral stent placement
      • Patients who failed with ureteral stent insertion went on to undergo ureteral reimplantation with or without Boari flap or psoas hitch, or transureteroureterostomy with success rates approaching 100%
    • Ligation of the ureter: removal ligature and observe the ureter for viability
      • If viability uncertain, perform ureteroureterostomy or ureteral reimplantation
    • Ureteroarterial fistula
      • A rare and potentially catastrophic condition that should be diagnosed and treated immediately because it can cause life-threatening hematuria
  • Principles of managing the injured ureter:
    1. Mobilize the injured ureter, sparing the adventitia widely, so as not to devascularize the ureter further
    2. Debride the ureter minimally but judiciously until edges bleed, especially in gunshot wounds
    3. Repair ureters with spatulated, tension-free, stented, watertight anastomosis, using fine absorbable monofilament such as 5-0 polydioxanone (PDS) and retroperitoneal drainage afterward. Use optical magnification if necessary.
    4. Retroperitonealize the ureteral repair by closing peritoneum over it if possible
    5. Do not tunnel ureteroneocystostomies but rather create a widely spatulated nontunneled anastomosis
    6. With severely injured ureters, blast effect, concomitant vascular surgery, and other complex cases, consider omental interposition to isolate the repair when possible
  • Surgical management
    • See Surgical repair section in Management of Upper Urinary Tract Obstruction Chapter Notes
    • Options for repair/reconstruction, choice depends on location and length of injury
      • Upper ureteral injuries (above iliac vessesls)
        1. Ureterocalycostomy
        2. Ureter-ureterostomy
        3. Trans-ureterostomy
        4. Ileal or other interposition (not recommended in acute setting)
        5. Autotransplant (not recommended in acute setting)
        6. Rarely, acute nephrectomy is required to treat ureteral injury after external violence
      • Lower ureteral injuries (below iliac vessesls)
        1. Ureteroneocystostomy
        2. Psoas hitch
        3. Boari flap
    • Follow-up after repair
      • 6 weeks: remove stent
        • At the time of stent removal, retrograde ureterogram can be perform to document healing without leakage or stenosis.
      • 10 weeks: furosemide (Lasix) renogram can document that the system continues to be unobstructed.
      • 4 months: renal US can document lack of hydronephrosis, which itself might indicate late obstruction

Questions

  1. Describe the 2018 AAST Kidney Injury Scale
  2. What are physical exam findings suggestive of renal trauma?
  3. As per the 2020 AUA Guidelines on Urotrauma, what are the indications for imaging in suspected renal trauma?
  4. What is the imaging of choice is suspected renal trauma?
  5. What is the management of renal trauma? With/without urinary extravasation?
  6. When is follow-up imaging indicated in renal trauma?
  7. What findings on CTU are suggestive of ureteral injury?
  8. What is the management of an unstable patient found to have ureteral injury intra-operatively?
  9. What is the management of ureteral contusion following gun shot wound?
  10. What are the surgical options to treat a penetrating ureteral injury following a stab wound?
  11. What are CT findings suggestive of significant renal injury?
  12. What factors are associated with increased need for intervention in grade 3 and 4 injuries?
  13. What are the indications for intervention in renal trauma?
  14. Which procedure is associated with the highest risk of ureteric injury?
  15. What are contraindications to IV methylene blue?
  16. List signs and symptoms associated with missed ureteral injury
  17. What is the timing of repair of a ureteric injury?
  18. What are the management options in an unstable patient with ureteric injury?

Answers

  1. Describe the 2018 AAST Kidney Injury Scale
    • Grade I: subcapsular hematoma and/or parenchymal contusion without laceration
    • Grade II: renal parenchymal laceration ≤1 cm depth without urinary extravasation OR perirenal hematoma within Gerota fascia
    • Grade III: renal parenchymal laceration >1 cm depth without collecting system rupture or urinary extravasation OR any injury in the presence of a kidney vascular injury or active bleeding contained within Gerota fascia
    • Grade IV: parenchymal laceration extending into urinary collecting system with urinary extravasation OR renal pelvis laceration and/or complete ureteropelvic disruption OR active bleeding beyond Gerota fascia into the retroperitoneum or peritoneum OR segmental renal vein or artery injury OR segmental or complete kidney infarction(s) due to vessel thrombosis without active bleeding
    • Grade V: main renal artery or vein laceration or avulsion of hilum OR devascularized kidney with active bleeding OR shattered kidney with loss of identifiable parenchymal renal anatomy
  2. What are physical exam findings suggestive of renal trauma?
    1. Flank bruising
    2. Broken ribs
    3. Hematuria
  3. As per the 2020 AUA Guidelines on Urotrauma, what are the indications for imaging in suspected renal trauma?
    1. Gross hematuria
    2. Microscopic hematuria and systolic blood pressure < 90mmHG
    3. Mechanism of injury concerning for renal injury
    4. Physical exam findings concerning for renal injury
    5. Penetrating injury
  4. What is the imaging of choice is suspected renal trauma?
    • CT with IV contrast with immediate and delayed images
  5. What is the management of renal trauma? With/without urinary extravasation?
    • In hemodynamically stable patients with renal injury, non-invasive management is preferred
    • In hemodynamically unstable patients, immediate intervention (surgery or angioembolization) is required
    • In patients with urinary extravasation due to suspected
      • Parenchymal collecting system injuries, a period of observation without intervention is advocated in stable patients where renal pelvis or proximal ureteral injury is not suspected
      • Renal pelvis or proximal ureteral avulsion (e.g., a large medial urinoma or contrast extravasation on delayed images without distal ureteral contrast), prompt intervention is required
  6. When is follow-up imaging indicated in renal trauma?
    • AAST Grade IV-V injury, should be done after 48 hours
    • Clinical signs complications (e.g., fever, worsening flank pain, ongoing blood loss, abdominal distention).
  7. What findings on CTU are suggestive of ureteral injury?
    1. Contrast extravasation
    2. Ipsilateral delayed pyelogram
    3. Ipsilateral hydronephrosis
    4. Lack of contrast in the ureter distal to the suspected injury
  8. What is the management of an unstable patient found to have ureteral injury intra-operatively?
    • Ureteral ligation followed by percutaneous nephrostomy tube insertion OR externalized ureteral catheter secured to the proximal end of the ureteral defect with delayed repair of the injury when patient stable
  9. What is the management of ureteral contusion following gun shot wound?
    • Ureteral stenting OR resection and primary repair depending on ureteral viability and clinical scenario
  10. What are the surgical options to treat a penetrating ureteral injury following a stab wound?
    • Injury above the iliac vessels: resection of non-viable ureteral tissue followed by uretero-ureterostomy over a ureteral stent; adjunct procedures (psoas hitch, Boari flap) may be needed
    • Below iliac vessels: ureteral reimplantation or uretero-ureterostomy over a stent

Additional References

Morey, Allen F., et al. "Urotrauma guideline 2020: AUA guideline." The Journal of urology 205.1 (2021): 30-35.

Wein AJ, Kavoussi LR, Partin AW, Peters CA (eds): CAMPBELL-WALSH UROLOGY, ed 11. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2015, chap 50