Nutcracker syndrome is one of the vascular syndromes which result from the compression of the left renal vein (LRV) and associated with embryological LRV development from the aortic collar at 6–8 weeks gestation [1]. The prevalence of nutcracker syndrome is unknown but it usually has peaks in middle-aged adults and the 2.nd to 3.rd decades and more frequently in females, although a later study demonstrated equal prevalence between males and females [1, 2]. Patients may present with symptoms such as abdominal pain, fatigue, or clinical features as proteinuria and hematuria [2] while they may be asymptomatic and diagnosed incidentally. In our case, the patient presented with a history of intermittent abdominal pain with fatigue and recurrent attacks of urinary tract infections for a long time.
In cases that require surgery, many surgical techniques had been described. Stent implantation, transposition of LRV or SMA, nephropexy, saphenous vein graft bypass even renal autotransplantation, and nephrectomy are some of the possible surgical treatment methods [3].
In our case, the patient is young and fit for surgery, so we decided to use the technique of using saphenous vein spiral graft bypass between the IVC and the mid-portion of the LRV. The operation was done with no complication and the patient was found free of the previous complaints completely as he confessed on his first control as an outpatient.
The idea of using a spiral graft is to give enough graft diameter for the blood return from LRV. We have not used synthetic graft that has risks of thrombosis and infection [4].
Stenting treatment is one of the treatment methods which can be used in such cases but carries the risk of thrombosis, dislocation, and migration of the stent. In a retrospective study done in 2011, the authors found that the majority of the patients (96%, 59 of 61) who had been treated with stenting of the LRV for nutcracker syndrome continued complaining of flank pain and hematuria for about 6 months post-procedure. Stent, thrombosis, migration, and dislodgement were also reported [5].
Transposition of the LRV and renal autotransplantation are other open surgical treatment methods, they are more aggressive procedures and carry the risks of ischemia and hematoma. SMA transposition surgical technique has the risk of possible SMA thrombosis and bowl ischemia so, the higher postoperative complication rate has minimized the popularity of this technique [6].
We preferred to use the surgical techniques of spiral vein graft to be far from the possible complications that may result from the other techniques such as thrombosis, dislocation, and migration of the stents in stenting technique, or ischemia of the bowls or kidney in SMA transposition technique, or hematoma and the possible need of nephrectomy in the transposition of the LRV and renal autotransplantation.
Intraoperatively, when we used side clamps for both IVC and LRV we did not occlude the blood return of the renal vein or IVC, so there was no need to clamp the renal artery and leaving the left kidney under the risk of ischemia.
In conclusion; many surgical techniques can be used in managing patients with nutcracker syndrome. Using a saphenous vein spiral graft has the advantages of being a biological graft with less possibility of occlusion or infection besides it has enough diameter to be suitable for the renal vein. Applying side clamps instead of cross clamps in this technique keeps the return of the blood flow from the kidney and does not require arterial clamping. This surgical technique can be done successfully with Satisfying results.