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Disorder of the number of kidneys

Renal agenesia

Renal agenesia can occur uni- or bilaterally, isolated or combined with other abnormalities (1/4 of all renal agenesias are associated with genital abnormalities, making it possible to determine the point in time when the anomaly appeared in the embryonic development).
Renal aganesia results from a missing development of the ureter anlage. This has the consequence that the metanephric blastema was not induced and thus no nephrons were formed.

Unilateral agenesia has an incidence of 1/1000, occurs more often in males and the majority are on the left side. They often go unnoticed because they are compatible with a normal life. One observes a compensatory hypertrophy of the normal kidney (> as 10% of the normal renal volume).

 
Macroscopy

Macroscopic picture

Fig. 28 - One-sided agenesia
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Bilateral agenesia is more seldom (1/10'000) and probably multi-factorially conditioned. It is responsible for an oligohydramnios with the Potter sequence and is not compatible with survival.

 

Too many kidneys (doubling)

This congenital anomaly is extremely seldom. Even if a doubling of the urinary tract occurs frequently, that of the kidneys is extraordinarily rare. Involved is an independent kidney with its own vascular supply, a capsule and its own urinary tract. The cause is a very early division of the ureter anlage before the invasion into the metanephric blastema.

Fig. 29 - Redundant kidney
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Rotationsanomalie

This anomaly is relatively frequent. One speaks of a malrotation if the pyelo-ureteral connection is oriented ventrally (missing rotation), dorsally (rotation of more than 90°) or laterally (inverse rotation). The kidney and urinary tract are here anatomically and histologically normal. Sometimes, though, one observes anomalies in the connections between ureter and renal pelvis, which can lead to a hydronephrosis (enlargement of the renal pelvis, the major and minor calices, leading in turn to an enlarged kidney).

Fig. 30 - Rotation anomaly
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A malrotation can occur uni- or bilaterally and be associated with an ectopia or fusion of the two kidneys. The association with an abnormality of the pyelo-ureteral connection is frequent and can be diagnosed with the help of an ultrasonographic examination.