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Management of high-grade pediatric renal trauma in tertiary referral hospital in Indonesia: A case series and literature review.
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports 2024 April 22
INTRODUCTION AND IMPORTANCE: Genitourinary tract injuries constitute 10 % of all traumas, with renal injuries being common in pediatric cases due to reduced perirenal fat and abdominal wall muscle development. However, very few reports of pediatric renal trauma in Indonesia have been reported. In this case series, We present a case series of high-grade renal injury and review the literature on pediatric renal trauma in Indonesia.
CASE PRESENTATION: We present four cases with renal trauma as the subjects of this case study. The 13-year-old boy, who was the initial patient, complained of hematuria and abdominal pain after falling from a tree. The second patient, the 13-year-old boy, presented with left lower back pain and hematuria after being elbowed in the left waist. The third patient, a 14-year-old boy, had been in a motorcycle accident and got grade 5 renal injury according to AAST classification. The final case involved a 4-year-old boy who experienced recurrent hematuria caused by a pseudoaneurysm following blunt renal trauma.
DISCUSSION: Trauma is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in children, with approximately 3 % of children assessed in pediatric hospital trauma departments having had trauma. With appropriate management according to guidelines, mortality can be avoided.
CONCLUSION: The case series highlights the significance of treating pediatric renal trauma patients individually according to their hemodynamic state and degree of impairment.
CASE PRESENTATION: We present four cases with renal trauma as the subjects of this case study. The 13-year-old boy, who was the initial patient, complained of hematuria and abdominal pain after falling from a tree. The second patient, the 13-year-old boy, presented with left lower back pain and hematuria after being elbowed in the left waist. The third patient, a 14-year-old boy, had been in a motorcycle accident and got grade 5 renal injury according to AAST classification. The final case involved a 4-year-old boy who experienced recurrent hematuria caused by a pseudoaneurysm following blunt renal trauma.
DISCUSSION: Trauma is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in children, with approximately 3 % of children assessed in pediatric hospital trauma departments having had trauma. With appropriate management according to guidelines, mortality can be avoided.
CONCLUSION: The case series highlights the significance of treating pediatric renal trauma patients individually according to their hemodynamic state and degree of impairment.
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