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Contemporary Management of Urinary Tract Stones
Mr Andrew Ballaro MD, FRCS(Urol) Consultant Urological Surgeon Specialist interest in Stone Surgery and Endourology Barking Havering Redbridge NHS Trust Spire Roding Hospital
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Introduction Urinary tract stones cause 1% of acute hospital admissions Lifetime chance 12% Incidence doubled since 1970s due to obesity 50% recurrence risk
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How to diagnose- symptoms
Large stones may be asymptomatic Renal stones may cause dull loin pain Small stones may cause most severe pain
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How to diagnose- investigations
Microhaematuria in 80% stones X-ray for follow-up but 10% radiolucent Ultrasound reasonably sensitive for > 5mm stones and hydronephrosis NCCT gold standard
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When to treat and refer Stone factors- Size and location
Symptoms Renal: <5mm vs >5mm Ureteric: <5mm 80% vs >5mm 50% chance passing Patient factors Elderly lady vs airline pilot Patient wishes Fitness
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How to treat-renal colic
Analgesia NSAID vs opiate Conservative vs active treatment Medical expulsive therapy Indications for intervention Uncontrolled pain Sepsis Failure of stone progression Solitary kidney or bilateral ureteric stones 6
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Rigid Ureteroscopy Ureteric stones: stent vs primary clearance
Rigid vs flexible ureteroscopy Laser vs lithoclast energy Laser vastly more efficient Reduces ureteric injuries Reduced stricture rate Propulsion
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How to treat- renal stones
Certain small renal stones can be dissolved Lithotripsy (ESWL) <1cm Laser Ureterorenoscopy < 2cm Percutaneous nephrolithotomy
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ESWL Introduced in 1980s Reduced effectiveness Mobile vs static units
40-50% success rates Residual fragments Difficult locations/drainage Complications Contraindications
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Ureterorenoscopy-renal stones
Requires flexible ureteroscopy skills Primary or salvage treatment after ESWL Minimally invasive state of the art treatment
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Ureterorenoscopy-renal stones
Enables stone clearance and retrieval Replacing ESWL and PCNL In skilled hands used for 2cm stones Day case procedure
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My laser service results
Sole surgeon for >700,000pop. 129 procedures since March 2011 40% for failed ESWL 100% clearance for ureteric stones 79-90% clearance for renal stones up to 2cm 92% day case rate 11% minor complications No major complications Favourably benchmarked with BLT Stone burden (mm) RFs <3mm >3mm 0-9 79% 5% 10-14 90% 9% >15 87% 13%
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Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy
> 2cm and staghorn stones More invasive 2-3 day admission
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Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy-Supine
Allows simultaneous ureterorenoscopy Reduces anaesthetic risks Reduces theatre time Equal stone clearance rates 54 cases performed since 2011 at BLT
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Nephrectomy Laparoscopic vs open Indications Pain HTN <15% function
Infections
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Stone Prevention Analyse all stones Serum calcium/urate
Recurrent stone former Stone screen Dietry advice High fluid Low salt Low animal protein Low oxalate
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Summary Refer all renal stones other than <5mm if asymptomatic first stone and patient does not want treatment. Refer ureteric stones if non-progressing or >5mm Contact me: NHS- BHRNHST Stone Clinic CAB Thursday am. Secretary: Anne Private- Tel anytime
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