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Congenital ureteral stricture, how to treat it?
If the patient has ureteral stricture and hydronephrosis, it is suggested that the patient should be operated as soon as possible. Generally speaking, the stricture should be removed first and then anastomosed. Simple stent placement is inaccurate and usually does not permanently improve obstruction. The patient wants to know the detailed diagnosis and treatment plan. It is suggested to log on to the website of Shanghai Jiangdong Hospital (National Urethral Reconstruction Hospital) and contact online experts, so that experts can analyze the patient's situation more pertinently. Congenital ureteral stricture is caused by long-term compression of abdominal blood vessels, and the symptoms are mostly swelling and pain in renal area. The imaging manifestation is mild hydronephrosis of renal pelvis, and the surgical treatment is effective and can be cured. Suggestion: Most of the symptoms are swelling and pain of renal pelvis, and the imaging manifestation is mild hydronephrosis. The surgical treatment is effective and can be cured. No drug can permanently dilate the narrow ureter to a normal level. Because your hydronephrosis is caused by ureteral stricture, you are in the hospital now. There is only one treatment: surgery. It must be carried out as soon as possible, otherwise long-term hydronephrosis will seriously damage the function of the kidney. Don't delay the illness. 1. Can it be treated conservatively without surgery? I'm worried, because many patients who have had surgery online have narrowed down after a few years.

65438+ You should also go to a big hospital and consult a doctor in detail. After the operation of congenital ureteral stricture, ureteral stricture will affect the excretion of renal urine and lead to hydronephrosis. The degree of hydronephrosis is different from the degree and location of stenosis, and it needs active treatment. This congenital stenosis requires ureterography to understand the degree and location of stenosis. It can relieve stricture by ureteroscopy dilatation or stent implantation. This interventional therapy has no sequelae.