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Ultrasound Probes have high success in
breaking up Kidney Stones
Newswise — When kidney stones become stuck
in the urinary tract, the pain can be
excruciating and debilitating.
A relatively new ultrasound probe procedure
has the highest success rate for breaking
down kidney stones in the lower “funnel”
area of the kidney, rather than the shock
wave treatment used for many years,
according to a review of studies.
However, the reviewers caution that the
studies were small, comprising only 214
patients, and the study methodology was of
low quality.
The review appears in the latest issue of
The Cochrane Library, a publication of The
Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates medical
research.
Systematic reviews like this one draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical
practice after considering both the content
and quality of existing medical trials on a
topic.
The authors looked at the effectiveness of
three minimally invasive procedures: the
older treatment, called extracorporeal shock
wave lithotripsy (ESWL); the ultrasound
procedure, or percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL);
and retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS),
which uses a fiber-optic endoscope.
ESWL, which has been in use since 1980,
sends shock waves directly to the kidney
stone to break it up so it can pass through
the urinary tract.
In the PCNL approach, the surgeon makes a
small incision at the person’s back to put
the scope into the kidney and then passes a
tube into the kidney through which the
surgeon can pass a laser ultrasound probe to
remove or break the stone into tiny pieces.
The RIRS procedure involves a fiber-optic
endoscope placed through the urethra and
into the bladder. The scope locates stones,
which the clinician can then disintegrate
with an ultrasound probe.
“We found that the ultrasound probe had a
much higher success rate in terms of
stone-free kidneys than using shock waves,”
said lead author Attasit Srisubat, M.D., at
the Institute of Medical Research and
technology assessment in Thailand.
“The success rate of using a fiber-optic
endoscope did not differ significantly from
shock wave treatment.
However, the use of shock wave treatment did
result in less time in the hospital and a
shorter duration of treatment.”
The overall success rates of each treatment
reviewed did not relate to patients’ age,
race or sex.
Kidney stones are rock-hard masses that
develop when crystals separate from urine.
For most people, kidney stones do not pose a
major medical problem because they usually
pass through the body’s urine stream without
any difficulty, but when stones grow too
large, intense pain can result, as well as
infection, blood in the urine and even
kidney failure.
There are three main funnels in the kidney —
upper, middle and lower. The review studies
focus on kidney stones in the lower funnel
(or lower pole), which drains the bottom
third of the kidney’s urine collecting
system.
Risk factors for developing kidney stones
include “family history, anatomical
abnormalities of kidney diseases, (and)
medications, such as whether a person is
taking calcium supplements or vitamin D
supplements,” Srisubat said.
Medicine helps some people, but other
patients need an alternative approach.
With the expanded use of minimally invasive
treatments, the need for open surgery to
remove stones has decreased.
Glenn Preminger, M.D., of the division of
urologic surgery with Duke University
Medical Center, routinely performs all three
noninvasive forms of stone removal.
“All of these treatments work relatively
well depending on the size, location and
composition of the stone,” he said.
“For certain stones that are large or are of
a hard composition, they may not fragment
well with shock wave treatment. For these we
prefer to use an endoscopic means of stone
removal.”
Anthony Smith, M.D., chief of the division
of urology at the University of New Mexico
School of Medicine, said they also use all
three methods compared in the review for
kidney stone removal.
“My
overall impression is that we are using less
and less shock wave treatment and more
ureteroscopic intervention with the laser.
"With
the new bi-directional ureteroscopes, we are
able to treat larger stones in the upper
urinary tract with great success,” he said.
Smith said that his facility does use shock
wave treatment for smaller stones that
clearly are visible on film. “But we think
we have better success with lower pole
stones using either ureteroscopic or
percutaneous approaches.”
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