Rupture of Renal Angiomyolipoma During Pregnancy: A Case Report
Author Information
Author(s): Kontos Stylianos, Politis Vasilios, Fokitis Ioannis, Lefakis Georgios, Koritsiadis Georgios, Simaioforidis Vasileios, Kachrilas Stefanos, Chatziplis Evangelos, Koritsiadis Sotirios
Primary Institution: Department of Urology, General Hospital of Nikea, Greece
Hypothesis
Do renal angiomyolipomas grow more aggressively during pregnancy?
Conclusion
Angiomyolipomas can grow rapidly during pregnancy and may lead to severe complications, but timely surgical intervention can be successful.
Supporting Evidence
- Renal angiomyolipomas are rare and can cause severe complications during pregnancy.
- The patient experienced hemodynamic instability and required emergency surgery.
- Histological examination confirmed the diagnosis of angiomyolipoma.
Takeaway
This study talks about a woman who had a kidney tumor that burst while she was pregnant, which is very dangerous, but doctors were able to help her and her baby.
Methodology
The case involved imaging studies (ultrasound and MRI) and surgical intervention (emergency cesarean delivery and nephrectomy).
Limitations
The study is based on a single case report, limiting generalizability.
Participant Demographics
A 28-year-old woman in her first pregnancy.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
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