| Literature DB >> 24171154 |
Alexander Gudkov1, Vacheslav Boshchenko, Alexander Petlin, Vladimir Afonin, Valery Diamant, Marat Lerner.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this clinical study is to assess the safety and efficiency of a novel lithotripsy method for endoscopic treatment of urinary stones throughout the urinary tract via semi-rigid and flexible endoscopes. This new method is based on the transfer of nanosecond high voltage electric pulses to the stones through flexible probes of various sizes.Entities:
Keywords: Endoscopic lithotripsy; Nanosecond electropulse lithotripsy; Nephrolithiasis; Urolithiasis
Year: 2013 PMID: 24171154 PMCID: PMC3806985 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1The principle of NEPL; comparison of volt-second characteristics of solid state and of liquid media: Ac - the point where the probability of a breakdown through liquid or solid is equal; U(t) – pulse voltage in the absence of breakdown; Us(t) – pulse voltage under breakdown of a solid dielectric; Ueh(t) – pulse voltage during liquid breakdown.
Patient distribution according to eligibility criteria
| Entry criteria | Kidney/ UPJ (Group I, n = 54) | Ureter (Group II, n = 799) | Bladder (Group III, n = 26) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper/3 (n = 164) | Middle/3 (n = 67) | Lower/3 (n = 568) | Ureter, total (n = 799) | |||
| 1st criterion (stone < 6 mm, renal colic, disturbance of urodynamic, no tendency to discharge), n (%) | 3/5 | 68 | 26 | 381 | 475 | N/A |
| (15%) | (42%) | (39%) | (67%)⊕ | (60%)⊕ | ||
| 2nd criterion (stone ≥ 6 mm, renal colic, disturbance of urodynamic), n (%) | 24/15 | 91 | 37 | 163 | 291 | N/A |
| (72%)ΔΔ | (55%)ΔΔ | (55%) | (29%)Δ | (36%) | ||
| 3rd criterion (stone of any size, no renal colic, no urodynamic or kidney function disturbance), n (%) | 4/3 | 5 | 2 | 17 | 24 | 26 |
| (13%) | (3%)ΔΔΔ⊕ | (3%) | (3%)ΔΔ | (3%) | (100%) | |
| 4th criterion (“Steinstrasse” following ESWL), n (%) | 0 | 0 | 2 | 7 | 9 | N/A |
| (0%) | (0%) | (3%) | (1%) | (1%) | ||
Note: ⊕ - p < 0.05 - Significant differences as compared to UPJ concrements; Δ - p < 0.05; ΔΔ - p < 0.01; ΔΔΔ - p < 0.001 - Significant differences as compared to concrements in the middle third of the ureter.
Distribution of stone size and location
| Stone size (mm) and location | Kidney/UPJ (Group I n = 54) | Ureter (Group II, n = 799) | Bladder (Group III, n = 26) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper/3 (n = 164) | Middle/3 (n = 67) | Lower/3 (n = 568) | Ureter total (n = 799) | |||
| Up to 5, n (%) | 6 (11%) | 87 (53%)** | 46 (69%)***⊕⊕ | 341 (60%)***⊕ | 474 (59%)***⊕ | 0 (0%) |
| 5, to 10, n (%) | 38 (70%) | 56 (34%) | 18 (27%)⊕⊕ | 201 (35%) | 275 (34%) | 3 (12%) |
| 10, to 15, n (%) | 6 (11%) | 15 (9%) | 3 (4%) | 26 (5%)* | 44 (6%) | 9 (35%) |
| 15, n (%) | 4 (8%) | 6 (4%)*** | 0 (0%)** | 0 (0%)*** | 6 (1%)*** | 14 (53%) |
Note: * - p < 0.05; ** - p < 0.01; *** - p < 0.001 – Significant differences as compared to urinary bladder concrements; ⊕ - p < 0.05; ⊕⊕ - p < 0.01 – Significant differences as compared to UPJ concrements.
Post treatment stone analysis
| Stone types according to stone analysis | Oxalate | Urate | Phosphate | Cystine |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relative incidence of stone types in study patients | 48% | 29% | 22% | 1% |
| Relative incidence of stone types according to available local prevalence data (Polienko & Bakirov | 47% | 30% | 22% | 1% |
Lithotripter settings used to achieve successful fragmentation and complete fragmentation success rates
| NEPL parameters | Kidney/UPJ (Group I, n = 54) | Ureter (Group II, n = 799) | Bladder (Group III, n = 26) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper/3 (n = 164) | Middle/3 (n = 67) | Lower/3 (n = 568) | Ureter, total (n = 799) | |||
| Average energy per pulse, J | 0.74±0.07 | 0.86±0.06 | 0.78±0.11 | 0.82±0.12 | 0.83±0.1 | 0.9±0.08 |
| Pulse mode and pulse frequency, Hz | Single or double pulses, | Double pulses, | Double pulses, | Double pulses, | Double pulses, | Series of 3-5 pulses, |
| 5 Hz | 5 Hz | 5 Hz | 5 Hz | 5 Hz | 5 Hz | |
| Number of pulses required for concrement destruction, n | 60±23* | 61±48* | 42±17* | 29±15** | 35±31** | 136±57 |
| % with complete fragmentation | Kidney: 96% | 91% | 100% | 95% | n/a | 100% |
| UPJ 100% | ||||||
Note: * - p < 0.05; ** - p < 0.01 – Reliable differences as compared to urinary bladder concrements.
Complications and undesirable effects of retrograde ureteroscopy
| No. | Complications | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| (%) | |||
|
|
| 63 | Can be considered to a great extent as complications of ureteroscopy |
| (7.4%) | |||
| I-1 | Ureter perforation | 18 | Related to mechanical impact, not electrical impact |
| (2.1%) | |||
| I-2 | Migration of a concrement or its fragments to a kidney | 45 | |
| (5.3%) | |||
|
|
| 140 | To a great extent, due to the effect of endoscopic manipulation |
| (16%) | |||
|
|
| ||
| III-1 | Recurrence of renal colic (patients from Groups I and II). | 88 | Result of endoscopic manipulation |
| (10.3%) | |||
| III-2 | Acute and chronic pyelonephritis, exacerbation of chronic cystitis | 71 | Result of endoscopic manipulation |
| (8.1%) | |||
| III-3 | Acute retention of urine (Groups II and III) | 6 | Result of endoscopic manipulation |
| (0.7%) | |||
|
|
| 194 | Result of lithotripsy. Typical of any type of lithotripsy. |
| (22%) |