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Endoscopic diagnosis and treatment of chronic unilateral hematuria of uncertain etiology.

We evaluated 12 patients with unilateral unexplained gross hematuria by flexible ureteropyeloscopy and percutaneous pyeloscopy. All patients had localized bleeding except for 1 with diffuse bleeding caused by the nutcracker phenomenon, and 2 in whom no hematuria appeared upon examination and no gross lesions were observed. Among the 9 patients with localized bleeding transitional cell carcinoma was found in 1, hemangioma in 4 and minute venous rupture in 4. These 9 patients were treated endoscopically and no recurrences were observed during a follow-up of 6 to 21 months (average 10.3 months). Our results underscore the importance and efficacy of flexible ureteropyeloscopy in the evaluation and management of chronic unilateral hematuria.

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