A nephrostomy tube is a thin, flexible, plastic tube that is used to drain urine from the kidney. Urine leaving the kidney is collected in a plastic bag attached to the tube outside your body. The bag can be strapped to your waist or leg so you can move freely.
Percutaneous nephrostomy describes the procedure in which the nephrostomy tube is inserted through the skin and into the kidney.
You will lie on your stomach, usually with one side slightly raised on a pillow. You will be given an injection of a painkiller and a sedative to reduce any discomfort. The area of skin around the entry site will be anaesthetized before the procedure.
Under the guidance of Ultrasound, X-ray or CT, the interventional radiologist will insert a needle through the skin and into the kidney and will then put a wire through the needle and insert the nephrostomy tube into the kidney over the wire.
You may be advised to have this procedure if the passage of urine to your bladder is blocked, most commonly because of a stone, infection, injury to the ureter or cancer. It can also be the first step of a procedure known as Percutaneous/ante grade ureteric stenting.
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