Introduction: Renal trauma, resulting from external mechanical injury, impacts both renal and vital prognosis, particularly in severe cases. In Africa, the predominant etiologies are road traffic accidents and falls. This study describes the diagnostic and therapeutic profile of renal trauma in two university teaching hospitals in Burkina Faso. Methods: A descriptive retrospective study was conducted over 5 years (2019-2023), including all patients managed for renal trauma. Sociodemographic, clinical, paraclinical, and therapeutic data were analyzed. Results: Forty cases were collected. The mean age was 25.5 years, with a male predominance (85%). Road traffic accidents accounted for 75% of causes. Clinically, lumbar pain (92.5%) and hematuria (77.7%) were common. All patients underwent CT urography (CTU), classifying lesions according to the AAST scale: grades IV (50%) and III (35%) predominated. Conservative management was applied in 95% of patients, including bed rest, analgesia, antibiotic therapy (57.5%), and blood transfusion (27.5%). Nephrectomy (5%) was required for hemodynamic instability or persistent life-threatening hematuria. The outcome was favorable for the majority, with complications (persistent urinoma/hematoma, abscess) in a few high-grade patients. Discussion: The patient profile (young active males) and etiology (road traffic injuries) are consistent with regional data. CTU is established as the key examination for assessment. The high rate of conservative management, even for grades III-IV, confirms this strategy as the standard for stable patients, allowing preservation of nephron mass without increased morbidity. Nephrectomy remains exceptional. Loss to follow-up limits the evaluation of long-term outcomes. Conclusion: Renal trauma in Burkina Faso primarily affects young males involved in road traffic accidents. Its management, largely conservative thanks to the contribution of CTU, is effective. Road safety prevention constitutes a major focus for reducing the incidence of these injuries.
| Published in | International Journal of Clinical Urology (Volume 10, Issue 1) |
| DOI | 10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14 |
| Page(s) | 14-18 |
| Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
| Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2026. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Renal Trauma, Traumatology, CT Urography, Conservative Management, Burkina Faso
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APA Style
Ouattara, A., Kirakoya, B., Sawadogo, H., Traore, Y. J. R. P., Ouedraogo, F., et al. (2026). Diagnosis and Management of Renal Trauma in Two University Teaching Hospitals in Burkina Faso. International Journal of Clinical Urology, 10(1), 14-18. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14
ACS Style
Ouattara, A.; Kirakoya, B.; Sawadogo, H.; Traore, Y. J. R. P.; Ouedraogo, F., et al. Diagnosis and Management of Renal Trauma in Two University Teaching Hospitals in Burkina Faso. Int. J. Clin. Urol. 2026, 10(1), 14-18. doi: 10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14
@article{10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14,
author = {Abdoul-Karim Ouattara and Brahima Kirakoya and Hassami Sawadogo and Yannick Jean Rodrigue Pingdwende Traore and Fatao Ouedraogo and Clotaire Alexis Marie Kiemdiba Donega Yameogo and Abdoul-Karim Pare and Adama Ouattara and Fasnewinde Aristide Kabore},
title = {Diagnosis and Management of Renal Trauma in Two University Teaching Hospitals in Burkina Faso},
journal = {International Journal of Clinical Urology},
volume = {10},
number = {1},
pages = {14-18},
doi = {10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14},
url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14},
eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijcu.20261001.14},
abstract = {Introduction: Renal trauma, resulting from external mechanical injury, impacts both renal and vital prognosis, particularly in severe cases. In Africa, the predominant etiologies are road traffic accidents and falls. This study describes the diagnostic and therapeutic profile of renal trauma in two university teaching hospitals in Burkina Faso. Methods: A descriptive retrospective study was conducted over 5 years (2019-2023), including all patients managed for renal trauma. Sociodemographic, clinical, paraclinical, and therapeutic data were analyzed. Results: Forty cases were collected. The mean age was 25.5 years, with a male predominance (85%). Road traffic accidents accounted for 75% of causes. Clinically, lumbar pain (92.5%) and hematuria (77.7%) were common. All patients underwent CT urography (CTU), classifying lesions according to the AAST scale: grades IV (50%) and III (35%) predominated. Conservative management was applied in 95% of patients, including bed rest, analgesia, antibiotic therapy (57.5%), and blood transfusion (27.5%). Nephrectomy (5%) was required for hemodynamic instability or persistent life-threatening hematuria. The outcome was favorable for the majority, with complications (persistent urinoma/hematoma, abscess) in a few high-grade patients. Discussion: The patient profile (young active males) and etiology (road traffic injuries) are consistent with regional data. CTU is established as the key examination for assessment. The high rate of conservative management, even for grades III-IV, confirms this strategy as the standard for stable patients, allowing preservation of nephron mass without increased morbidity. Nephrectomy remains exceptional. Loss to follow-up limits the evaluation of long-term outcomes. Conclusion: Renal trauma in Burkina Faso primarily affects young males involved in road traffic accidents. Its management, largely conservative thanks to the contribution of CTU, is effective. Road safety prevention constitutes a major focus for reducing the incidence of these injuries.},
year = {2026}
}
TY - JOUR T1 - Diagnosis and Management of Renal Trauma in Two University Teaching Hospitals in Burkina Faso AU - Abdoul-Karim Ouattara AU - Brahima Kirakoya AU - Hassami Sawadogo AU - Yannick Jean Rodrigue Pingdwende Traore AU - Fatao Ouedraogo AU - Clotaire Alexis Marie Kiemdiba Donega Yameogo AU - Abdoul-Karim Pare AU - Adama Ouattara AU - Fasnewinde Aristide Kabore Y1 - 2026/02/24 PY - 2026 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14 DO - 10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14 T2 - International Journal of Clinical Urology JF - International Journal of Clinical Urology JO - International Journal of Clinical Urology SP - 14 EP - 18 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2640-1355 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20261001.14 AB - Introduction: Renal trauma, resulting from external mechanical injury, impacts both renal and vital prognosis, particularly in severe cases. In Africa, the predominant etiologies are road traffic accidents and falls. This study describes the diagnostic and therapeutic profile of renal trauma in two university teaching hospitals in Burkina Faso. Methods: A descriptive retrospective study was conducted over 5 years (2019-2023), including all patients managed for renal trauma. Sociodemographic, clinical, paraclinical, and therapeutic data were analyzed. Results: Forty cases were collected. The mean age was 25.5 years, with a male predominance (85%). Road traffic accidents accounted for 75% of causes. Clinically, lumbar pain (92.5%) and hematuria (77.7%) were common. All patients underwent CT urography (CTU), classifying lesions according to the AAST scale: grades IV (50%) and III (35%) predominated. Conservative management was applied in 95% of patients, including bed rest, analgesia, antibiotic therapy (57.5%), and blood transfusion (27.5%). Nephrectomy (5%) was required for hemodynamic instability or persistent life-threatening hematuria. The outcome was favorable for the majority, with complications (persistent urinoma/hematoma, abscess) in a few high-grade patients. Discussion: The patient profile (young active males) and etiology (road traffic injuries) are consistent with regional data. CTU is established as the key examination for assessment. The high rate of conservative management, even for grades III-IV, confirms this strategy as the standard for stable patients, allowing preservation of nephron mass without increased morbidity. Nephrectomy remains exceptional. Loss to follow-up limits the evaluation of long-term outcomes. Conclusion: Renal trauma in Burkina Faso primarily affects young males involved in road traffic accidents. Its management, largely conservative thanks to the contribution of CTU, is effective. Road safety prevention constitutes a major focus for reducing the incidence of these injuries. VL - 10 IS - 1 ER -