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经皮肾造瘘术的注意事项

Do's and don't's of percutaneous nephrostomy.

作者信息

Zagoria R J, Dyer R B

机构信息

Department of Radiology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1088, USA.

出版信息

Acad Radiol. 1999 Jun;6(6):370-7. doi: 10.1016/s1076-6332(99)80233-5.

Abstract

Percutaneous nephrostomy procedures generally are safe. The associated mortality rate is approximately 0.04%, and the incidence of important complications is 5% (2-4). To minimize complications, certain precautions always should be followed. First, radiologists should perform a preprocedural evaluation of the patient, with correction of marked coagulopathy or thrombocytopenia before all but the most emergent procedures. Second, antibiotics should be administered routinely before nephrostomy drainage; the choice of antibiotics can be based on the specific patient's risk factors for bacteriuria. To minimize the risk of clinically important renal vascular damage, radiologists should do the following: 1. Always achieve adequate visualization of the calices. 2. Identify a posterior calix for puncture that will give access to the appropriate segment of the kidney for anticipated procedures and allow safe creation of a tract. 3. Puncture below the 11th rib (and preferably below the 12th rib when feasible). 4. Puncture the tip of a posterior calix from a 20 degrees-30 degrees, posterolateral oblique approach to avoid major blood vessels. 5. Make a single-wall puncture of the calix. 6. Perform exchange transfusion for opacification of the renal pelvis and calices during percutaneous nephrostomy procedures to minimize the risk of sepsis. Overdistention can increase the likelihood of sepsis or retroperitoneal contamination. 7. Inject contrast material via a catheter placed over a wire to confirm the intracollecting system location of the entry. 8. Avoid unnecessary (complicated, prolonged) procedures in an infected, obstructed system. 9. Use only self-retaining drainage catheters to minimize the risk of inadvertent catheter dislodgment. 10. Create large-bore tracts with a balloon dilation system. By contrast, radiologists should not do the following: 1. Puncture above the 11th rib (unless all other avenues of approach have been exhausted). 2. Lose access to an obstructed kidney once the kidney has been punctured. Placement of a "safety" wire for all complex manipulations is recommended. 3. Panic if excessive bleeding or evidence of adjacent organ injury is seen. Excessive bleeding usually can be stopped with tract tamponade by using a balloon catheter advanced through the tract or with placement of an appropriate-sized nephrostomy tube to occlude the tract. If active bleeding continues or recurs, arteriography should be considered. The quantity of bleeding can be monitored with sequential hematocrit measurements. Almost all renal artery injuries can be treated with minimally invasive procedures, such as selective embolization of the branch artery involved, and this will lead to infarction of only a small segment of kidney, with preservation of functioning renal parenchyma. Injury to an adjacent organ usually can be treated nonsurgically (21,23). The most commonly injured extrarenal abdominal organ is the colon (Fig 6). On occasion, a percutaneous nephrostomy needle may traverse the retroperitoneal segment of the colon, and this type of injury generally can be treated nonsurgically, as well (23). If the colon has been traversed, adequate urinary drainage should be ensured before the transcolonic nephrostomy catheter is removed (so that a nephrocolonic fistula is not maintained). This can be done by placing a ureteral stent and a bladder catheter (18). Once adequate urinary drainage is provided, the nephrostomy catheter can be withdrawn into the colon and used as a percutaneous colostomy drain. The percutaneous colostomy tract should be allowed to mature for several days before this catheter is removed. In addition, appropriate antibiotics should be administered from the time a transcolonic tract is identified until the percutaneous tract has healed completely. Transthoracic entry can cause pneumothorax and pleural effusions. These should be treated only if they are large or cause symptoms (21). (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

经皮肾造瘘术一般是安全的。其相关死亡率约为0.04%,重要并发症的发生率为5%(2 - 4)。为尽量减少并发症,应始终遵循某些预防措施。首先,放射科医生应在术前对患者进行评估,除最紧急的手术外,在所有手术前纠正明显的凝血功能障碍或血小板减少症。其次,应在肾造瘘引流术前常规使用抗生素;抗生素的选择可基于患者菌尿的特定危险因素。为尽量降低临床上重要的肾血管损伤风险,放射科医生应做到以下几点:1. 始终要使肾盏得到充分显影。2. 确定一个后组肾盏进行穿刺,该肾盏应能为预期手术提供进入肾脏合适节段的通道,并允许安全地建立通道。3. 在第11肋以下穿刺(可行时最好在第12肋以下)。4. 从20度 - 30度的后外侧斜位进针穿刺后组肾盏的尖端,以避开主要血管。5. 对肾盏进行单壁穿刺。6. 在经皮肾造瘘术中进行交换冲洗以使肾盂和肾盏显影,以尽量降低败血症风险。过度扩张会增加败血症或腹膜后感染的可能性。7. 通过置于导丝上的导管注入造影剂,以确认穿刺入口位于集合系统内。8. 在感染、梗阻的系统中避免不必要的(复杂、延长的)操作。9. 仅使用自固定引流导管,以尽量降低导管意外移位的风险。10. 使用球囊扩张系统建立大口径通道。相比之下,放射科医生不应做以下事情:1. 在第11肋以上穿刺(除非所有其他穿刺途径都已用尽)。2. 一旦肾脏被穿刺,不要失去对梗阻肾脏的穿刺通道。建议对所有复杂操作放置“安全”导丝。3. 如果出现大量出血或有邻近器官损伤的迹象,不要惊慌。大量出血通常可通过经通道推进球囊导管进行通道压迫止血,或放置合适尺寸的肾造瘘管阻塞通道来止血。如果持续有活动性出血或再次出血,应考虑进行动脉造影。可通过连续测量血细胞比容来监测出血量。几乎所有肾动脉损伤都可用微创方法治疗,如对受累分支动脉进行选择性栓塞,这只会导致一小部分肾实质梗死,同时保留有功能的肾实质。邻近器官损伤通常可通过非手术治疗(21,23)。最常受损伤的肾外腹部器官是结肠(图6)。有时,经皮肾造瘘针可能会穿过结肠的腹膜后段,这种类型的损伤通常也可通过非手术治疗(23)。如果穿刺针穿过了结肠,在拔除经结肠肾造瘘导管之前应确保充分的尿液引流(以免维持肾结肠瘘)。这可通过放置输尿管支架和膀胱导管来完成(18)。一旦提供了充分的尿液引流,肾造瘘导管可撤回至结肠内,并用作经皮结肠造瘘引流管。在拔除该导管之前,应让经皮结肠造瘘通道成熟几天。此外,从确定经结肠通道之时起至经皮通道完全愈合,应给予适当的抗生素。经胸穿刺可导致气胸和胸腔积液。只有当它们量大或引起症状时才进行治疗(21)。(摘要截断)

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