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Title: Valved shunt as a treatment for obstructive uropathy: does pressure make a difference? Author: Kitagawa H, Seki Y, Nagae H, Aoba T, Manabe S, Ooyama K, Koike J, Takagi M, Zuccollo J, Tatsunami S, Pringle KC. Journal: Pediatr Surg Int; 2013 Apr; 29(4):381-6. PubMed ID: 23392914. Abstract: PURPOSE: A valved ventriculo-peritoneal shunt (V-P shunt) as a vesico-amniotic shunt (V-A shunt) preserves the filling/emptying cycle and normal bladder development in fetal lambs with bladder outlet obstruction. The optimal pressure for such shunts is unknown. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We created obstructive uropathy in 60-day gestation fetal lambs. A V-A shunt was placed 3 weeks later, using a low-pressure (Group L: 15-54 mmH2O) or a high-pressure (Group H: 95-150 mmH2O) V-P shunt. We included non-shunted (obstructive uropathy, Group O) and control lambs (Group C). All were delivered at 130 days. Bladder volumes, bladder thickness, renal and bladder histology were compared. RESULTS: Seventeen lambs had an obstructive uropathy created. Five Group L (four survived), four Group H (three survived) and five Group O survived. Body weight and crown-to-rump lengths of the three groups were not significantly different. Group H lambs had a dilated urachus, urinary ascites and severe ureteral dilatation similar to Group O lambs. There were four Group C lambs. Bladder volume was 10, 15 and 1,150 ml in Group H, 115 ± 67.9 ml in Group L, 128 ± 99.8 ml in Group O and 24.5 ± 3.84 ml in Group C. Unlike Group O lambs, Group L did not have urinary ascites, urinomas or renal dysplasia. CONCLUSION: Low-pressure shunts preserved both bladder volume and renal development. High-pressure shunts did neither.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]