The Journal of Urology 2012-09-01

Fragility of brushite stones in shock wave lithotripsy: absence of correlation with computerized tomography visible structure.

James C Williams, Tariq Hameed, Molly E Jackson, Syed Aftab, Alessia Gambaro, Yuri A Pishchalnikov, James E Lingeman, James A McAteer

Index: J. Urol. 188(3) , 996-1001, (2012)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Brushite stones were imaged in vitro and then broken with shock wave lithotripsy to assess whether stone fragility correlates with internal stone structure visible on helical computerized tomography.A total of 52 brushite calculi were scanned by micro computerized tomography, weighed, hydrated and placed in a radiological phantom. Stones were scanned using a Philips® Brilliance iCT 256 system and images were evaluated for the visibility of internal structural features. The calculi were then treated with shock wave lithotripsy in vitro. The number of shock waves needed to break each stone to completion was recorded.The number of shock waves needed to break each stone normalized to stone weight did not differ by HU value (p = 0.84) or by computerized tomography visible structures that could be identified consistently by all observers (p = 0.053). Stone fragility correlated highly with stone density and brushite content (each p <0.001). Calculi of almost pure brushite required the most shock waves to break. When all observations of computerized tomography visible structures were used for analysis by logistic fit, computerized tomography visible structure predicted increased stone fragility with an overall area under the ROC curve of 0.64.The shock wave lithotripsy fragility of brushite stones did not correlate with internal structure discernible on helical computerized tomography. However, fragility did correlate with stone density and increasing brushite mineral content, consistent with clinical experience with patients with brushite calculi. Thus, current diagnostic computerized tomography technology does not provide a means to predict when brushite stones will break well using shock wave lithotripsy.Copyright © 2012 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Combined studies of chemical composition of urine sediments and kidney stones by means of infrared microspectroscopy.

2013-02-01

[J. Biomed. Opt. 18(2) , 27011, (2013)]

Stone compositions in Turkey: an analysis according to gender and region.

2013-09-01

[Urology 82(3) , 532-7, (2013)]

Effect of fluoride, lesion baseline severity and mineral distribution on lesion progression.

2012-01-01

[Caries Res. 46(1) , 23-30, (2012)]

Dose-response effects of zinc and fluoride on caries lesion remineralization.

2012-01-01

[Caries Res. 46(1) , 62-8, (2012)]

Changing stone composition profile of children with nephrolithiasis.

2013-07-01

[Urology 82(1) , 210-3, (2013)]

More Articles...