The Journal of urology
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The Journal of urology · Apr 1992
Case ReportsTumor in the horseshoe kidney: clinical implications and review of embryogenesis.
We report on 3 patients with tumor in a horseshoe kidney, 1 of whom had bilateral tumor (renal cell cancer on the right side and urothelial cancer on the left side). Tumors that arise predominantly in the bridge of a horseshoe kidney can mimic the symptoms of an intra-abdominal disease process. Besides routine diagnostic procedures, angiography is essential to plan the surgical approach, which in principle should be organ-sparing. ⋯ Recently reported data suggest that the theory of a mechanical fusion is valid only for horseshoe kidneys with a fibrous isthmus but that an abnormal migration of the posterior nephrogenic area causes the majority of horseshoe kidneys in which the isthmus consists of parenchyma. Development of the isthmus through abnormal migration could predispose this location for renal cell cancer and would explain the varying forms of blood supply. Additionally, this hypothesis supports the previously raised assumption that horseshoe kidneys may be the result of teratogenic factors, which also may be responsible for the known increased incidence of related congenital anomalies and of nephroblastoma.