Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of sheathless and fluoroscopy-free flexible ureterorenoscopic laser lithotripsy (FURSL) for treating renal stones. Methods: Between May 2015 and May 2017, 135 patients with renal stones treated with sheathless and fluoroscopy-free FURSL were prospective...

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Main Authors: Sarwar Noori Mahmood, Hewa Toffeq, Saman Fakhralddin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-07-01
Series:Asian Journal of Urology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214388219300773
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spelling doaj-f3c78b9d2dc540e0b0af5e8fef9ac8602020-11-25T02:48:22ZengElsevierAsian Journal of Urology2214-38822020-07-0173309317Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centersSarwar Noori Mahmood0Hewa Toffeq1Saman Fakhralddin2University of Sulaimani College of Medicine, Kurdistan, Iraq; Corresponding author.Sulaimania General Teaching Hospital, Sulaimania, IraqSulaimania General Teaching Hospital, Sulaimania, IraqObjective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of sheathless and fluoroscopy-free flexible ureterorenoscopic laser lithotripsy (FURSL) for treating renal stones. Methods: Between May 2015 and May 2017, 135 patients with renal stones treated with sheathless and fluoroscopy-free FURSL were prospectively evaluated. Our technique involved a semi-rigid ureteroscopic assessment of the ureter, and the guidewire was left in situ to railroad the flexible ureteroscope. A holmium laser was used to fragment and dust the stones; fragments were neither grasped nor collected. Results: The study population consisted of 135 patients including 85 males (62.96%) and 50 females (37.04%) with a mean age of 40.65 years (range: 3–70 years) were evaluated. The mean stone size was 17.23 mm (range: 8–41 mm). Complete stone-free status was achieved in 122 (90.37%) patients and clinically insignificant residual fragments (CIRF) in two (1.48%), while residual stones were still present in 11 (8.15%) patients. Postoperative complications occurred in 23 (17.4%) cases and were mostly minor, including fever in 17 (12.6%), pyelonephritis in four (3.0%), subcapsular hematoma in one (0.7%) and steinstrasse in one (0.7%). These complications were Clavien I-II, GI in 17 (12.6%) patients, GII in five (3.7%), and Clavien IIIb in one (0.7%). No major complications were observed. Stone size ≥2 cm, operative time ≥30 min, and lasing time ≥20 min were significantly associated with a higher rate of complications and lower stone-free rates upon univariate analysis (p<0.05). Conclusion: Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free FURSL are effective and safe for renal stone management, especially for stones under 2 cm in diameter. This process is a feasible option for avoiding sheath complications, which can protect surgeons from the negative effects of radiation.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214388219300773Renal stoneRetrograde intrarenal surgerySheathless flexible ureterorenoscopyFluoroless retrograde intrarenal surgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarwar Noori Mahmood
Hewa Toffeq
Saman Fakhralddin
spellingShingle Sarwar Noori Mahmood
Hewa Toffeq
Saman Fakhralddin
Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
Asian Journal of Urology
Renal stone
Retrograde intrarenal surgery
Sheathless flexible ureterorenoscopy
Fluoroless retrograde intrarenal surgery
author_facet Sarwar Noori Mahmood
Hewa Toffeq
Saman Fakhralddin
author_sort Sarwar Noori Mahmood
title Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
title_short Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
title_full Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
title_fullStr Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
title_full_unstemmed Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: An attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
title_sort sheathless and fluoroscopy-free retrograde intrarenal surgery: an attractive way of renal stone management in high-volume stone centers
publisher Elsevier
series Asian Journal of Urology
issn 2214-3882
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of sheathless and fluoroscopy-free flexible ureterorenoscopic laser lithotripsy (FURSL) for treating renal stones. Methods: Between May 2015 and May 2017, 135 patients with renal stones treated with sheathless and fluoroscopy-free FURSL were prospectively evaluated. Our technique involved a semi-rigid ureteroscopic assessment of the ureter, and the guidewire was left in situ to railroad the flexible ureteroscope. A holmium laser was used to fragment and dust the stones; fragments were neither grasped nor collected. Results: The study population consisted of 135 patients including 85 males (62.96%) and 50 females (37.04%) with a mean age of 40.65 years (range: 3–70 years) were evaluated. The mean stone size was 17.23 mm (range: 8–41 mm). Complete stone-free status was achieved in 122 (90.37%) patients and clinically insignificant residual fragments (CIRF) in two (1.48%), while residual stones were still present in 11 (8.15%) patients. Postoperative complications occurred in 23 (17.4%) cases and were mostly minor, including fever in 17 (12.6%), pyelonephritis in four (3.0%), subcapsular hematoma in one (0.7%) and steinstrasse in one (0.7%). These complications were Clavien I-II, GI in 17 (12.6%) patients, GII in five (3.7%), and Clavien IIIb in one (0.7%). No major complications were observed. Stone size ≥2 cm, operative time ≥30 min, and lasing time ≥20 min were significantly associated with a higher rate of complications and lower stone-free rates upon univariate analysis (p<0.05). Conclusion: Sheathless and fluoroscopy-free FURSL are effective and safe for renal stone management, especially for stones under 2 cm in diameter. This process is a feasible option for avoiding sheath complications, which can protect surgeons from the negative effects of radiation.
topic Renal stone
Retrograde intrarenal surgery
Sheathless flexible ureterorenoscopy
Fluoroless retrograde intrarenal surgery
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214388219300773
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AT samanfakhralddin sheathlessandfluoroscopyfreeretrogradeintrarenalsurgeryanattractivewayofrenalstonemanagementinhighvolumestonecenters
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