The Case | A 64-year-old woman with retroperitoneal fibrosis, acute kidney injury, and active urine sediment

A 64-year-old female ex-smoker with a past medical history of retroperitoneal fibrosis, hypertension, and psoriasis was treated with bilateral robotic ureterolysis for stent-dependent ureteric obstruction from retroperitoneal fibrosis (negative for IgG4). Four weeks later, she presented for scheduled stent removal and routine blood tests. She reported feeling nauseous and tired after the ureterolysis procedure but denied flank pain or fever. Urine output was normal, and physical examination was unremarkable.
Source: Kidney International - Category: Urology & Nephrology Authors: Tags: Make Your Diagnosis Source Type: research