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During the congress, E-Posters will be accessible to all participants on the congress website 24/7, as well as in the E-poster stations in the congress center.
Preparing your E-Poster
Please review the E-Poster format requirements carefully when preparing your E-Poster. Should your E-Poster not meet the mentioned requirements, it may not be displayed as described above.
E-Poster Submission Deadline
Please prepare and upload your E-Poster no later than March 14, 2026 11.59PM CET. After this date, you will no longer be able to prepare and upload your E-poster and it will not be displayed and accessible on the congress website.
Please follow the instructions below to input your abstract title.
Abstract titles should be brief and reflect the content of the abstract.
Post-renal acute kidney injury (AKI) is a reversible cause of renal impairment if the urinary tract obstruction is promptly relieved. In elderly men, prostatic hypertrophy is the leading cause, potentially resulting in azotemia and uremic encephalopathy. Immediate decompression is crucial to prevent permanent kidney damage.
Observational
An 82-year-old man presented with decreased consciousness and anuria for two days, preceded by progressively weakened urinary stream over several months. Initial laboratory tests revealed Urea 320 mg/dL and Creatinine 14 mg/dL. Serum potassium was 6.3 mEq/L. Abdominal ultrasonography showed mild bilateral hydronephrosis and significant prostate enlargement (volume 74 mL). The patient underwent immediate urinary catheterization and electrolyte correction, followed by definitive treatment with Transurethral Resection of the Prostate (TURP). Post-TURP, the patient showed rapid clinical improvement and diuresis. Renal function normalized quickly: Creatinine decreased to 5.25 mg/dL on day 1, then to 0.96 mg/dL on day 3, and 0.70 mg/dL on day 5. Histopathology revealed Prostatic Adenocarcinoma (WHO Grade V). At the 3-month follow-up, renal function remained stable and normal (Creatinine 0.97 mg/dL).
We report an 82-year-old male with post-renal AKI due to prostate cancer who showed clinical and laboratory improvement following TURP.