Evaluation of shock wave lithotripsy injury in the pig using a narrow focal zone lithotriptor

What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Of all the SW lithotriptors manufactured to date, more research studies have been conducted on and more is known about the injury (both description of injury and how to manipulate injury size) produced by the Dornier HM‐3 than any other...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:BJU international 2012-11, Vol.110 (9), p.1376-1385
Hauptverfasser: Connors, Bret A., McAteer, James A., Evan, Andrew P., Blomgren, Philip M., Handa, Rajash K., Johnson, Cynthia D., Gao, Sujuan, Pishchalnikov, Yuri A., Lingeman, James E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Of all the SW lithotriptors manufactured to date, more research studies have been conducted on and more is known about the injury (both description of injury and how to manipulate injury size) produced by the Dornier HM‐3 than any other machine. From this information have come suggestions for treatment protocols to reduce shock wave (SW)‐induced injury for use in stone clinics. By contrast, much less is known about the injury produced by narrow‐focus and high‐pressure lithotriptors like the Storz Modulith SLX. In fact, a careful study looking at the morphology of the injury produced by the SLX itself is lacking, as is any study exploring ways to reduce renal injury by manipulating SW delivery variables of this lithotriptor. The present study quantitates the lesion size and describes the morphology of the injury produced by the SLX. In addition, we report that reducing the SW delivery rate, a manoeuvre known to lower injury in the HM‐3, does not reduce lesion size in the SLX. OBJECTIVE •  To assess renal injury in a pig model after treatment with a clinical dose of shock waves using a narrow focal zone (≈3 mm) lithotriptor (Modulith SLX, Karl Storz Lithotripsy). MATERIALS AND METHODS •  The left kidney of anaesthetized female pigs were treated with 2000 or 4000 shock waves (SWs) at 120 SWs/min, or 2000 SWs at 60 SWs/min using the Storz SLX. •  Measures of renal function (glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow) were collected before and 1 h after shock wave lithotripsy (SWL) and the kidneys were harvested for histological analysis and morphometric quantitation of haemorrhage in the renal parenchyma with lesion size expressed as a percentage of functional renal volume (FRV). •  A fibre‐optic probe hydrophone was used to determine acoustic output and map the focal width of the lithotriptor. •  Data for the SLX were compared with data from a previously published study in which pigs of the same age (7–8 weeks) were treated (2000 SWs at 120 or 60 SWs/min) using an unmodified Dornier HM3 lithotriptor. RESULTS •  Treatment with the SLX produced a highly focused lesion running from cortex to medulla and often spanning the full thickness of the kidney. Unlike the diffuse interstitial haemorrhage observed with the HM3, the SLX lesion bore a blood‐filled core of near‐complete tissue disruption devoid of histologically recognizable kidney structure. •  Despite the intensity of tissue destruction at the
ISSN:1464-4096
1464-410X
DOI:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2012.11160.x