Urinary stones are a common disease affecting one in 11 people . Their clinical presentation varies from being silent to severe loin pain owing to urinary obstruction. Currently, ESWL is the treatment of choice for most renal calculi ⩽30 mm, with success rates of 60-99%. Although many treatment options exist, ESWL has the advantages of simplicity and non-invasiveness. In contrast, failure of a first ESWL attempt requires a follow-up ESWL procedure, or an alternative procedure, both of which increase medical costs. Advancements in imaging have significantly contributed to this process. In the mid- 1990s, computed tomography (CT) began to replace intravenous urography (IVU), abdominal films (KUB), and ultrasound (US) in stone diagnosis. Studies demonstrated that CT had superior sensitivity and specificity for stone diagnosis compared to the aforementioned modalities. Now non-contrast multidetector CT (NC-MDCT) is the gold standard for the detection of urinary system calculi. CT is also clinically useful as it can show alternate renal and non-renal pathology if present. Many factors have been reported to predict ESWL outcome, such as skin-to-stone distance (SSD), stone size, stone location, multiplicity, the energy used, and Hounsfield Unit (HU) values measured by non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT).
Excellent fragmentation results are produced using ESWL. However, the retention of post-ESWL fragments in the kidney continues to be a significant medical issue. Only 32% of calcium stone patients in research were found to remain stone-free for 12 months following ESWL, according to the results. As a result, it appears that fragment growth and persistence are frequent after ESWL \[10\]. The first ESWL residual that is accessible must undergo a thorough stone analysis to properly carry out the subsequent treatments to prevent relapse or recurrent stone because stone-free rates after ESWL are directly connected to stone placement, size, number, and composition
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
55
multislice computed tomography
Assiut University Hospital
Asyut, Egypt
RECRUITINGct follow up during swl
Correlation between the stone density before and during ESWL sessions to determine if this predicts the success prevent new ESWL.
Time frame: 3 weeks
stone Hounsfield
Determine the role of the density of the residual stone fragments in the prediction of the complication during ESWL.
Time frame: 3weeks
density of stone and other factors
Correlate between stone density and other factors in the prediction of the success of ESWL.
Time frame: 3weeks
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