Conservative versus invasive management of symptomatic hydronephrosis in pregnancy: maternal and fetal outcomes
Nuh Aldemir, İbrahim Üntan, Ipek Uzaldi, Nur Cansu Yılmaz Baldan, Royale Seferli Aldemir

TL;DR
This study compares conservative and invasive treatments for kidney swelling during pregnancy, finding no major differences in outcomes for mothers or babies.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the clinical equivalence of conservative and invasive management for symptomatic hydronephrosis in pregnancy.
Findings
Conservative management was associated with higher birth weights compared to invasive interventions.
Invasive procedures led to lower BUN levels but no significant difference in serum creatinine.
Neonatal outcomes like Apgar scores were similar between the two treatment groups.
Abstract
The management of symptomatic hydronephrosis during pregnancy requires balancing maternal and fetal health. This exploratory retrospective study evaluated outcomes of conservative versus invasive intervention approaches in pregnant patients with symptomatic hydronephrosis. We conducted a retrospective analysis of pregnant patients with symptomatic hydronephrosis who underwent conservative management or invasive interventions. Groups were compared regarding demographics, gestational age at diagnosis, fetal birth weight, maternal renal function, and pregnancy-related complications. The conservative (n = 52) and invasive intervention (n = 29) groups had comparable baseline characteristics, including maternal age (25.8 ± 4.7 vs. 27.0 ± 4.9 years, p = 0.290) and gestational age at diagnosis (24.1 ± 5.9 vs. 24.8 ± 5.8 weeks, p = 0.610). Birth weight was significantly higher with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies · Kidney Stones and Urolithiasis Treatments · Urological Disorders and Treatments
