Interactive Transcript
2:02
So our objectives for this
2:06
session are to look at some real life cases and talk
2:09
about things that are frequently encountered.
2:11
We'll also discuss some rarities, but focus on the common,
2:15
and we're going to dip into embryology.
2:17
I know embryology is not always
2:18
everyone's favorite topic,
2:20
but it really helps a lot to understand what's
2:23
happening in the embryo and the fetus
2:25
in order to understand the genitourinary anomalies
2:29
that are frequently first identified in the
2:31
newborn period and even prenatally.
2:33
So antenatal hydronephrosis is the number
2:36
one indication for ultrasounds after birth.
2:41
And so, we will follow up on some of those embryology
2:46
questions and then I want to emphasize over and over.
2:49
During this lecture,
2:50
that urine is moving down a one-way street.
2:52
So almost all of our problems can be identified
2:55
when we see disruption of that one-way traffic of urine.
3:00
So moving along, we're going to look at cases
3:06
of antenatal hydronephrosis,
3:07
and we're going to look at some of those embryologic
3:10
anomalies and even some associated cases
3:13
that start out as ventral wall defects,
3:17
or failures of the ventral fold to close.
3:19
So this is a fetal MR image of a bladder outlet
3:23
obstruction, a lower urinary tract obstruction and you
3:26
can see this really expanded, bladder and posterior
3:31
urethra. This turned out to be a case
3:32
of posterior urethral valves,
3:34
but we're going to be looking at cases like that,
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upper and lower areas of obstruction.
3:40
So just...
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why is it important to be able
3:43
to identify these things early?
3:45
Well, it turns out that prenatal hydronephrosis
3:48
is something that's very common.
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It's a very common cause of all prenatal abnormalities.
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It's also a very common cause of,
3:55
you know,
3:56
the ultrasound imaging that we do after birth.
3:59
We can also with fetal MRI as well as prenatal
4:02
ultrasound, and there are cases now where
4:04
we're doing intrauterine intervention.
4:06
So if there's a bladder outlet obstruction,
4:07
for example,
4:08
you can place a shunt which will decompress some of
4:11
that fluid and there's been variable
4:13
success with that intervention.
4:15
There are also amnioinfusions. So if the fetus
4:18
doesn't void, then the amniotic fluid gets
4:21
swallowed and now there's no more amniotic fluid,
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it's not coming back out and sometimes we can infuse a
4:28
supplemental amniotic fluid to help the fetus.
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So, what we're going to be doing in most of these cases
4:35
prenatally is we're going to be looking at the dia-
4:38
the diameter of the renal pelvis. And these are some of
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the numbers that people frequently cite as cut-offs.
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And I as you can see, the number changes around
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the thirty three week period. Interestingly,
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the thirty three week period is also a really important
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time in terms of whether the lungs are undergoing
4:57
net absorption of fluid or net secretion of fluid.
5:00
So we can see a lot of corollary
5:04
effects in the pulmonary,
5:05
the fetal pulmonary system with the urinary
5:09
abnormalities. And that ends up being a really
5:12
important determinant of outcomes.
5:14
So this is a two side-by-side images of
5:17
prenatal ultrasound. If you're disoriented,
5:20
you don't commonly look at these images,
5:22
always look for the shadowing from the fetal
5:24
spine and you can see the shadowing here
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so you know where posterior is.
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And then on either side of that spine, in the
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retroperitoneum, of course,
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are the fetal kidneys. And you can see measurements
5:34
taken of the renal pelvis here.
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This is a fairly common thing to see a
5:38
little bit of fluid in the renal pelvis.
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Sometimes our obstetrical colleagues will refer to
5:42
this as pyelectasis. Postnatally, we would say
5:46
pelviectasis. That's not a concerning finding.
5:49
Here, we can see a little more asymmetric dilatation.
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This is kind of a traditional transverse or,
5:55
you know, we might say axial view,
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where you can see that fluid in the renal pelvis
5:59
and in this more of a coronal view,
6:01
you can identify the splitting,
6:03
the bifurcation of the great vessel.
6:05
So that's too much fluid.
6:06
That's abnormal and asymmetric renal pelvic dilatation,
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and that's something that's going to be followed up
6:12
after birth. Here's the corollary of the fetal MRI.
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This is...
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the maternal body is upright,
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but the fetus is in cephalic presentation.
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So that's why it's upside down. And you can see,
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bilateral,
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renal pelvic dilatation, but much more severe on
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one side than the other. It can be
6:32
sometimes difficult to determine what side you're on.
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But here's the stomach,
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so we can be pretty confidence the left kidney.
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We've got caliceal and pelvic dilatation there.
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And then here's what it looks like on an axial
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image of the fetal body on MRI. So here's the spine,
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of course,
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here's renal pelvic dilatation here,
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some renal pelvic dilatation here,
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and then this massively dilated ureter as well.
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So we know there's some distal obstruction.
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