romancing the stone

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ROMANCING THE STONE THIRTY YEARS OF PROGRESS IN THE DIAGNOSIS, PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT OF URINARY CALCULI

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ROMANCING THE STONE. THIRTY YEARS OF PROGRESS IN THE DIAGNOSIS, PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT OF URINARY CALCULI. WHY STONES?. Lifetime prevalence 13% Stone belt phenomenon Global warming American diet Sedentary lifestyles. DIAGNOSIS. Symptoms – flank pain Physical exam Urinalysis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ROMANCING THE STONE

ROMANCING THE STONE

THIRTY YEARS OF PROGRESS IN THE DIAGNOSIS, PREVENTION AND

MANAGEMENT OF URINARY CALCULI

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WHY STONES?

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• Lifetime prevalence 13%• Stone belt phenomenon• Global warming• American diet• Sedentary lifestyles

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DIAGNOSIS

• Symptoms – flank pain• Physical exam• Urinalysis • Radiographic

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RADIOLOGY - 1982

• KUB• IVP

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PROBLEMS WITH IVP

• Some stones are radiolucent• Contrast allergy• Contrast nephropathy• Radiation exposure

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RADIOLOGY - 2012

• Rarely contrast studies (CT, IVP) • Non-contrast CT scanning

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ADVANTAGES

• No contrast• Fast• Only indinavir stones and some matrix stones

are “radiolucent” for the CT• ? Other pathology found

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DISADVANTAGES

• Radiation exposure• Expense

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MEDICAL MANAGEMENT - 1982

• Taught no need to investigate first stone• Water• Thiazides

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WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED?

• If you have first stone, you are going to have another

• Medical management works• Oxalate restriction• Importance of uric acid in calcium stone

formation (protein restriction)• Importance of citrate as inhibitor• Importance of limiting salt intake

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INTERVENTION - 1982

• If stone is < 5 mm, let it pass• Still good advice but can be morbid and

patient may be unproductive during that time (shouldn’t drive if taking pain meds)

• Can we predict better who will pass their stone?

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PREDICTION OF SPONTANEOUS URETERAL CALCULUS PASSAGE WITH AN ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORK

James M. CummingsSeth D. IzenbergDavid Kitchens

Rupa KothandapaniUniversity of South Alabama

Mobile, Alabama

AUA 1999, JUrol 2000

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Results

• 125 patients used to train neural network• 55 patients in test set (25 with spontaneous

passage, 30 required intervention)• Network prediction was correct in 42

patients (76%)• Network prediction was 100% correct in the

subgroup passing their stones

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Influences on network predictions

Symptom duration*Hydronephrosis grade

PositionNausea/vomitingObstruction grade

*Most influential in neural network by far

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INTERVENTION - 1982

• Blind stone basketing• Open surgery

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INTERVENTION - 2012

• Ureteroscopy (URS)• Percutaneous nephrostolithotomy (PCNL)• Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)

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Ureteroscopy

• Performed transurethrally• Good for ureteral stones• Stone free rate 95% for distal ureteral stones• Flexible and rigid scopes• Variety of baskets, small lithotriptors and

lasers

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PCNL

• Scope passed into kidney through small incision in flank

• Stone visualized and broken up and extracted• Used mainly for very large staghorn type

stones

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EXTRACORPOREAL SHOCKWAVE LITHOTRIPSY

(ESWL)

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ESWL

• Discovered as a result of research into stress on airplane wings passing through air

• Thousands of shock waves passed through body to strike stone

• Stone breaks into small pieces and pass• Best used with renal and upper ureteral

stones < 2.5 cm in size

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Complications / Morbidity

• Hematuria (gross or microscopic): 100%• Pain: 60-70%• Renal colic in 5-10%• Hematoma / perirenal hemorrhage

(clinically significant): <1%• Sepsis <1%• Steinstrasse

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Complications / Morbidity

• Renal trauma (hemorrhage, endothelial cell damage, glomerular atrophy & sclerosis, & interstitial fibrosis)– 22% decrease in GFR after ESWL in solitary kidneys;

29% decrease after PCNL• Hypertension (inconclusive)• Bowel perforation: 3 reports.

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Efficacy

Opell & Pahira. Contemp Urol; 12-27, October 2000

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Efficacy

• Stone-free rate using HM-3 for stones < 2 cm is 91.3% at 3 months

• Only 50-70% stone-free rate with 2-3 cm stones

• In general, stone-free rate is inversely related to stone size

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CONCLUSIONS – IN 30 YEARS

• Diagnosis has moved from contrast studies to noncontrast CT

• Prevention is used over a broader range of sufferers

• Intervention is minimally invasive with scopes and shockwaves – no longer open surgery or blind efforts