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This video shows Ectopic Kidney with a stone in the ureter. During normal embryological development, there is cephalic migration of the kidneys to their normal retroperitoneal location and an ectopic location is a result of arrested migration. The kidney during its normal ascent has multiple aortoiliac branches, which degenerate when the kidney reaches its normal location. An ectopic kidney usually doesn't cause health problems, or complications, and may work normally. An ectopic kidney is a birth defect in which a kidney is located in an abnormal position. In most cases, people with an ectopic kidney have no complaints. In other cases, the ectopic kidney may create urinary problems, such as urine blockage, infection, or urinary stones. Ectopic kidney (or “renal ectopia”) describes a kidney that isn't located in its usual position. Ectopic kidneys are thought to occur in about 1 out of 900 births. But only about 1 out of 10 of these are ever diagnosed. They may be found while treating other conditions. In some people who were born with a single kidney, or had a kidney removed during childhood, there is a chance of some slight loss in kidney function later in life. Most people with one kidney live healthy, normal lives with few problems. In other words, one healthy kidney can work as well as two. Drinking in moderation (one drink a day for women and two drinks a day for men) usually won't harm your kidneys. Alcohol has this effect on whether you have one or two kidneys, but it may lead to kidney failure more quickly when you only have one functioning kidney.