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Urine leakage from the umbilicus in a child with achondroplasia and tetraplegia (due to cervical stenosis): A safety vent for the obstructed neuropathic bladder

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Abstract

Urine leakage from the umbilicus was observed while expressing urine by the Crede manoeuvre in a three-year-old tetraplegic girl with a chronically distended urinary bladder. Intravenous urography (IVU) revealed bilateral hydroureteronephrosis with markedly distended urinary bladder. Regular three hourly intermittent catheterization was advised, and the parents and carers of this child agreed to perform catheterization. There was cessation of urine leak within 48 hours of urethral drainage. Cystography performed two weeks later showed no vesicoureteric reflux; vesicoumbilical fistula was no longer demonstrable. Follow-up IVU, performed after eight and half months of regular intermittent catheterization, showed regression of hydroureteronephrosis. We believe that urine leakage from the umbilicus served two important protective functions in this child, viz. (1) it prevented possible vesical or renal rupture; (2) the striking clinical symptom of urine leak from the umbilicus focussed the attention of the carers to the underlying serious condition of the urinary tract. Further, this case demonstrates that regression of marked hydroureteronephrosis can be achieved by intermittent catheterization performed at regular intervals by devoted parents/carers, in selected cases of spinal cord injury with neuropathic bladder, and vesical outlet obstruction thus obviating the need for any form of temporary or permanent urinary diversion.

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Krishnan, K.R., Vaidyanathan, S., Soni, B.M. et al. Urine leakage from the umbilicus in a child with achondroplasia and tetraplegia (due to cervical stenosis): A safety vent for the obstructed neuropathic bladder. International Urology and Nephrology 29, 45–51 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02551416

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