Abstract

Midaortic syndrome (MAS) is a well-recognized but rare cause of renovascular hypertension (RVH). Several techniques have been described to treat RVH caused by MAS. The authors recently treated two children with MAS and RVH. In both patients the right kidney had two renal arteries. A 13-year-old boy presented with severe headaches, pain in his lower extremities with exertion, and marked hypertension (blood pressure, 170 110 ). An aortogram demonstrated 70% narrowing of his abdominal aorta from the suprarenal region to 5 cm above the iliac bifurcation. There was significant stenosis of the celiac axis, superior mesenteric artery, and left renal artery. The right kidney had two renal arteries, and the upper pole artery was stenotic at its origin. A 10-year-old girl, known to have hypertension for several years had an aortogram that demonstrated 70% narrowing of the abdominal aorta from the suprarenal region to 3 cm above the iliac bifurcation. There was involvement of the left renal artery at its orifice. She also had two renal arteries to the right kidney with the right upper pole artery being stenotic at its origin and in the mid-portion of the vessel. Aortic reconstruction was accomplished with a polytetrafluoroehtylene (PTFE) bypass graft in each case. The first case also involved patch angioplasty of the celiac axis. In both cases, the right kidney was autotransplanted. It was removed intraoperatively, cold perfused, and the two renal arteries reconstructed followed by transplantation to the right iliac vessels. In both cases the left renal artery was reimplanted into the PTFE graft. Both patients had uncomplicated postoperative courses. The 13-year-old boy had evidence of renal ischemia in a portion of the lower pole of the autotransplanted kidney by DTPA scan. He has mild hypertension controlled with antihypertensive medication. The 10-year-old girl has a normal DTPA scan and is normotensive. MAS is a rare and challenging congenital vascular anomaly that causes RVH. In the presence of double renal arteries the technique of autotransplantation with cold perfusion and “bench” vascular reconstruction reduces the warm ischemia time and should produce satisfactory results.

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