The first 500 patients who underwent percutaneous stone removal at our hospital and who have been evaluated for at least 8 months were reviewed. Comparison of the first 100 patients with the entire series showed a sharp improvement in the success rate as the radiologic and urologic team gained experience. The success rate for simple pelvicaliceal stones was 98% in the entire series (vs. 89% in the first 100 cases) and 87% for staghorn calculi. The most common complication was bleeding, with 12% of the patients requiring transfusion. Other complications include infection (0.6%), retained stone fragments (4%), and ureteropelvic junction stricture (1%). There was 1 death, an obese diabetic woman who suffered a myocardial infarction. Successful stone extraction requires a properly placed nephrostomy tract, and radiologic and urologic expertise. The advent of extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy will not abolish the need for nephrostolithotomy.
Computed tomography (CT) was performed in 9 consecutive cases of primary gastric neoplasm. Lesions were surgically or endoscopically proved; cross-sectional images are correlated to specific histopathology in each case. The CT images of leiomyoma and leiomyoblastoma are characterized as models of pure bulging intramural growth resulting in a lunate contrast distribution when imaged in the cross-sectional plane. In 5 cases of lymphoma, distortion of the contrast-filled hollow viscus is relatively consistent. Nodular growth is reflected on the CT image as a series of digitations encroaching on the opacified portion of the gastric lumen. Image pattern recognition, relative to histopathology, is of more than academic interest since endoscopy is frequently unreliable in cases of submucosal and exophytic pathology. Further, biopsy of such lesions is commonly nondiagnostic as a result of random choice of biopsy site or inadequate depth of tissue sample. Additionally, this report includes images of lesions that simulate the primary gastric pathology and may be a source of erroneous interpretation. These include: pseudocyst of the pancreas (2 cases) and enlargement of the left lobe of the liver with encroachment on the gastric lumen (1 case). Image specificity on CT examination is increasingly essential to diagnosis and surgical planning.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.