Abstract

BackgroundLocalized cystic disease of the kidney is a rare, non-familial condition. Its imaging and clinical features are unique and need to be differentiated from autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease and focal cystic masses such as multicystic nephroma and cystic renal cell carcinoma. It is always restricted to one kidney and is characterized by multiple cysts of varying sizes separated by residual normal renal tissue.Materials and methodsThis study reports 12 cases of localized cystic disease of the kidney based on imaging findings and clinical histories. The modalities of choice were ultrasonography followed by contrast-enhanced computed tomography. Eight out of 12 patients were men and the average age of presentation was 46 years. The screening of family members and relatives was done to rule out the differentials.ResultsLocalized cystic disease of kidney was diagnosed in all the patients and it presented in two different forms. In three patients, multiple cysts involved whole of the kidney, resulting in thinned-out residual renal parenchyma. In the rest nine patients it remained localised to a particular segment of the kidney. No cysts were observed in the contralateral kidney in seven patients, and one or two simple cysts were observed in five. Clinical presentations included only flank pain in six patients, flank pain with palpable abdominal mass in four patients, two patients presented as asymptomatic cases with diagnosis as an incidental finding and one patient with hematuria. Eight patients underwent imaging and two underwent clinical follow-up for a period of two years showing stability of the disease. One patient underwent nephrectomy for suspected renal neoplasm.ConclusionLocalized cystic disease of the kidney is a unilateral, rare and stable disease that has two different forms of presentations. Its imaging findings should be clearly understood so as to not classify it as a separate disease and avoid unnecessary surgery. It rarely leads to hypertension or polycythemia, and until then no definitive management is required. It can be followed up using imaging techniques and requires nephrectomy only when the suspicion of malignancy is strong.

Highlights

  • Localized cystic disease of kidney is a rare, non-familial, non-progressive and benign condition, first described as unilateral polycystic kidney disease in 1964

  • This study reports 12 cases of localized cystic disease of the kidney based on imaging findings and clinical histories

  • Localized cystic disease of kidney was diagnosed in all the patients and it presented in two different forms

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Summary

Introduction

Localized cystic disease of kidney is a rare, non-familial, non-progressive and benign condition, first described as unilateral polycystic kidney disease in 1964. It is a multicystic disease characterized by cysts of varying sizes located in a diffusely enlarged kidney without forming a separately encapsulated mass [1,2,3,4,5]. All the studies done before 1970 only reported that unilateral renal cystic disease (URCD) might be different from autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) [6]. Unilateral renal localization, absence of family history, absent extra-renal manifestations and non-progression towards chronic renal failure are some of the features that distinguish unilateral renal cystic disease (URCD) from autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). It is always restricted to one kidney and is characterized by multiple cysts of varying sizes separated by residual normal renal tissue

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