Abstract

Background: Bladder stones are a rare pathological condition in women, often secondary to any etiology. Further investigations are required to identify the various factors involved in their formation and the complications they cause. For a woman, the appearance of a bladder stone following a predisposing factor, in particular an intra-vesical foreign body is a source of recurrent urinary tract infections and calculus, manifested by dysuria and hypogastric heaviness. This study aimed to describe the case of the formation of a bladder calculus from the presence of a non-absorbable suture. Case presentation: The case of a 30-year-old woman with a bladder stone causing several recurrent urogenital infections despite years of medical treatment is reported. After several additional para-clinical investigations, an ultrasound diagnosis of a bladder stone with pre-renal failure was established. The patient underwent a median exploratory laparotomy below the umbilicus for surgical management, followed by an open cystolithotomy with the extraction of a large bladder stone on which an old suture was implanted, probably as a result of the previous cesarean section. Conclusion: Bladder stones are rare, but relatively rare in our environment, with limited diagnostic resources. In this case, it appears that the non-absorbable suture was inadvertently placed in the bladder during the cesarean section, which has unfortunately contributed to recurrent urogenital infections and the formation of bladder calculus.

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