Abstract

Anomalies of the urinary tract occur in some 13-27% of infants with congenital posterolateral diaphragmatic defect (CDD) and are often severe (renal agenesis, dysplasia, hypoplasia, or hydronephrosis). To test the hypothesis that urinary and diaphragmatic anomalies share elements of pathogenesis, we reviewed 60 autopsy cases of CDD studied at our institution. Sixteen patients (27%) manifested anomalies of the urinary tract: 12 had markedly altered kidneys, 8 of which were unilateral and ipsilateral to the diaphragmatic defect. Among 27 patients free of gross urinary tract anomalies, kidney weights formed a skewed distribution, with most values above published norms for body weight; by analysis of covariance, kidney weight (as a function of body weight) was significantly greater in CDD than in a control population of infants free of chronic illnesses and congenital anomalies who died suddenly and unexpectedly. Differences in glomerular number and diameter could not be identified between the latter groups. In 71% of patients with isolated left CDD, the left kidney was heavier than the right, a reversal of the usual condition in infancy. These findings demonstrate that both marked and subtle changes of the urinary tract in CDD are generally ipsilateral to the diaphragmatic defect and suggest that the pathogenetic mechanisms responsible for urinary and diaphragmatic anomalies may overlap topographically. Aberrant morphogenesis within a developmental field or fields is one explanation for this.

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