Renal vein entrapment, especially concerning the right renal vein, represents a scarcely explored anatomical aberration. The right renal vein's pivotal role in renovascular renal hemodynamics underlines the clinical significance of its compression, which can precipitate an elevated renal venous pressure gradient in relation to the inferior vena cava. This report delineates a unique instance of right renal vein entrapment in a 92-year-old male cadaver, identified during routine dissection. This entrapment is due to an unusual course of the right middle suprarenal artery that originates from the abdominal aorta and traverses inferior and retrocaval, causing the middle suprarenal artery to course anteriorly and superiorly to the right renal vein. This case, not paralleled in the extant literature, bears resemblance to the left renal vein entrapment in nutcracker syndrome (NCS) and thereby raises conjectures about possible renal manifestations akin to NCS in similar anatomical anomalies. The primary objective of this report is to augment the understanding and clinical relevance of this rare anatomical deviation in renal health.
Keywords: cadaver case report; middle suprarenal artery; nutcracker syndrome (ncs); rare anatomical variants; right renal vein compression.
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