1 / 29

Renal stones

Renal stones. Dr.Bandar Al Hubaishy Urology Department KAUH. Clinical picture. Renal stones: Small stones: Pain Infection Hematouria. Large renal stones: They are asymptomatic e.g. staghorn stones Which are associated by UTI. Ureteric stones:

glendac
Download Presentation

Renal stones

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Renal stones Dr.Bandar Al Hubaishy Urology Department KAUH

  2. Clinical picture • Renal stones: Small stones: Pain Infection Hematouria

  3. Large renal stones: They are asymptomatic e.g. staghorn stones Which are associated by UTI

  4. Ureteric stones: Renal colic: it is a severe colicky pain in the flank that can radiate to the groin and scrotum in male Nausea and vomiting Hematouria Irritative symptoms as the stones in the distal part of the ureter

  5. Physical examination • Costovertebral angel tenderness • No peritoneal signs

  6. Work up Laboratory

  7. Urine analysis for evidence of hematouria and infection • CBC for evidence of systemic infection

  8. Serum electrolytes • Serum calcium • PTH • Phosphate • Uric acid

  9. Metabolic screen • 24 hours urinary collection offor levels of pH, calcium, oxalate, uric acid, sodium, phosphorus, citrate, magnesium, creatinine, and total volume

  10. The goal of metabolic screen • To prevent future stone formation due to metabolic abrnomalities

  11. Indications for metabolic screen • Residual calculi after surgical treatment • Initial presentation with multiple calculi • Initial presentation before age 30 years • Renal failure • Solitary kidney (including renal transplant) • Family history of calculi • More than one stone in the past year • Bilateral calculi

  12. Imaging studies

  13. KUB Renal ultrasound Spiral C.T abdomen without contrast IVP

  14. KUB To detect radiopaque stones To follow up the radiopaque stone

  15. Ultrasound For radiolucent stones and for pregnant stones To assess the presence of hydronephrosis It can not assess the presence of ureteric stones

  16. IVP • It assess both function and anatomy of the renal system • Delayed nephrogram is the only hallmark for urinary tract obstruction

  17. Contraindications of IVP: Pregnancy Pediatric Allergy Mettformin Renal impairment

  18. It is no longer used as the standard for the initial evaluation of a patient with a kidney stone : • Up to 6 hours may be required to complete the study in the presence of severe obstruction. • For optimal results, IVU requires a bowel preparation. • It involves intravenous injection of potentially allergic and mildly nephrotoxic contrast material

  19. Spiral C.T abdomin and Pelvis without contrast • It is the best initial radiographic examination for acute renal colic. • Advantages of a CT scanning include the following: • It can reveal other pathology (eg, abdominal aneurysms, appendicitis, cholecystis). • It can be performed quickly. • It avoids the use of intravenous contrast materials.

  20. Disadvantages of CT scanning include the following: • It cannot be used to assess individual renal function. • It can fail to reveal some unusual radiolucent stones, such as those caused by indinavir, which are invisible on the CT scan. Because of this possibility, IVUs with contrast should be used for patients taking indinavir. • It is relatively expensive.

  21. It exposes the patient to a relatively high radiation dose. • Precise identification of small distal stones is occasionally difficult. • It is not suitable for tracking the progress of the stone over time, supporting the recommendation for KUB radiography along with the CT scan.

  22. MANAGEMENT

  23. It depends on the site , size and the general condition of the patient • The management involve medical and surgical management

  24. Renal Stones • Small renal stones less than 0.6 mm: Hydration Ebimag Follow up in the clinic with KUB every 2 weeks

  25. Renal stones size 0.7mm-2cm: ESWL Hydration Analgesic KUB follow up in the clinic

  26. Renal stones bigger than 2 cm Percutaneous nephrostolithotomy (PCNL)

  27. Ureteric Stones Non obstructing stone: • Hydration • Ebimag • Analgesic

  28. Obstructing ureteric stone • If the patient is stable, ureteroscopy and lithotripsy • If the patient is not stable,do double j stent insertion or nephrostomy tube to decompress the obstruction

  29. THANK YOU

More Related