Sunday, 1 April 2012

Chyluria: introduction, etiology, diagnosis and treatment


Chylous urine
Introduction:

  Chyluria  -  Milky urine

         Defined as leakage of lymphatic fluid in urine.

         An infrequently discussed problem which is not uncommon in our area.

         Described by CHARAK in 300B.C. as ‘ SHUKLAMEHA’

         Prevalent in African countries and Indian Subcontinent.

         Seen in rural and economically weaker population

Etiopathogenesis:

Chyluria is a state of chronic lymphourinary reflux caused by obstruction to the lymphatic flow.

         Parasitic
         Non – Parasitic

            Parasitic infestation
                         /
            Obliterative lymphangitis
                         \
            Lymphatic hypertension
                          /
            Varicosity and collateral formation
                           \
            Failure of valvular system
                           /
            Back flow
                        \
            Rupture of varicosities into renal calyces and pelvis.
 
PARASITIC (Primary, Tropical)

         Wuchereria  bancrofti (most important and most common)
         Eustrongilus gigas
         Taenia echinococcus
         Taenia nana
         Malarial parasites
         Cereonomas nominitis


NON – PARASITIC (Secondary, Non – Tropical)
         Congenital
         Lymphangiomas of urinary tract
         Megalymphatics with ureteral or vesical fistulae
         Stenosis of thoracic duct
         Retroperitoneal lymphangiectasia.
         Traumatic lymphangio urinary fistulae
         Obstruction of lymphatics due to
        thoracic duct obstruction by tumor
        granuloma glands, aortic aneurysm

Other causes
         Pregnancy
         Diabetes
         Pernicious  Anemia

Clinical features:
  1. Monosyptomatic
  2.  Polysymptomatic
         nutritional deficiencies
         recurrent clot colic
         urinary retention
          UTI
          Hematuria
          Immunosuppression (loss of Ig A and Ig G cause lymphopenia leading to                                                               promotion of opportunistic fungal infections, malignant tumors.)

Diagnosis:
1 .Confirm chyluria
2. Ruleout other causes of milky urine(pyuria, phosphaturia, caseousuria)
3. Confirm the cause of chyluria (99% is failarial)
4. Exclude secondary causes like tuberculosis, tumour by ultrasound abdomen or CT scan.

Urine sample:
Naked eye examination: Urine settles down into 3 layers-fat  on the top,clots in the middle and debris in the bottom
Ether test: Milky urine becomes transperant on adding Ether
Biochemical examination: For Triglycerides
Microscopy: Chylomicrons,  RBC’s,Lymphocytes
TREATMENT
         Disease of unknown natural history
         It is a self limiting disorder with intermittent remissions and exacerbations.
        
Man of them require:
Reassurance
Antifilarial treatment
Dietary modifications
Correction of anemia
 Bed rest                                           Abdominal Binders          

DIETARY  MODIFICATIONS:
         Minimal oil in diet
         Use nonstick pans to minimize the amount of oil
         Avoid ghee
         Use coconut oil as cooking medium
         Skimmed milk is better
         Cow milk is better than buffalo `
         (Boil, cool, refrigerate for 12hrs and strain top cream layer          before use)
         Avoid fried foods like poori, cream biscuits, parantha, chat, pastry
         Avoid dry fruits
          Restrict sweets
          Avoid mutton
          Fish and chicken are better ;roast or boil instead of   fry
          Boiled egg is better than having it as fried or omlette  (Not more than 1-2 whole eggs/ week)
          Routine diet should include roti, broken wheat,rice, corn flakes,dals,fruits and vegetables               

Indications for Intervention  : 
         Weight Loss
         Hypoproteinemia
         Recurrent clots
         Anaemia due to haematochyluria
         Refractory chyluria
         Psychological disturbance

Interventional therapy
          Cystoscopy &sclerosant instillation(RPIS)
          Surgical –open / laparoscopic
           Nephrolympholysis
          Microsurgery  

RPIS  (Retrograde pelvic instillation of sclerosants)
      Agents:
           Silver Nitrate 1%
           Povidone Iodine 0.2%
           Dextrose 50%
           Hypertonic saline 3%
           Urograffin 

Mechanism:
Installation of agent – reaches lymphatics through fistulae – chemical lymphangitis – blockade of lymphatics due to edema – immediate relief.
Healing by fibrosis – permanent relief.

Procedure :
              High fat diet evening before sclerotherapy
              NBM for 5hrs
                      Anesthesia – local, caudal
              IV – antibiotics + Lasix (steroids – sos)
              Cystoscopy to identify the side (85% unilateral, 15% Bilateral)
              RGP – 6Fr ureteric catheter
              Size of pelvis estimated injecting water till pain develops ( 7 – 10ml)
              Only one side at a time
              Contralateral side planned after 6 weeks.
Preparation and schedule
         AgNO3 – 1gr in 100ml
         Povidone – 1:50 dilation of 10% W/v in water
         Povidone Iodine  + 50% dextrose
              8th hrly instillation for 3 days
              12th hrly instillation for 2 days
              ½  hrly  instillation  for  2hrs.
Response
         70% - permanent remission with single course
         30% - recurrence
         2nd course of RPIS -   50% remission
                                                       50% need surgery
         Late failure is due to recanalization of lymphatics – better response with 2nd RPIS.

SURGERY:

Indications:
         Failure of instillation therapy 
    Techniques:
      Lympho-urinary disconnection (open / retroperitoneoscopy)
                       
         High fat diet 24 – 36hrs prior surgery
         Kidney is freed all around
     NEPHROLYMPHOLYSIS HILAR STRIPPING -    Renal hilar lymphatics are cleared
  URETEROLYMPHOLYSIS -   Downward mobilization of ureter up to pelvic brim                                                                                    
         Nephropexy , fasciectomy – optional
     Lymphangio – venous anastomosis
    Men – Inguinal region
         Women – dorsum of foot, leg, thigh
  Renal autotransplantation

To  summarise :
Ø      Chyluria – an alarming symptom with benign course
Ø      Can be diagnosed by simple urinary tests
Ø      Rare secondary causes should be ruled out
Ø      Most of them do not need any intervention except for reassurance
Ø      70-80% can be cured with RPIS
Dietary modifications may help preventing recurrence.



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