Tubeless percutaneous renal surgery is a safe procedure and offers numerous advantages over routine placement of a nephrostomy tube. The hospitalization, analgesia requirements, return to normal activities as well as cost are significantly less with this new technique.
Renal hemorrhage is the most worrisome complication of percutaneous renal surgery. Between August 1983 and August 1992 we performed 2,200 percutaneous renal operations, with 17 patients (0.8%) requiring angiography and embolization for significant bleeding uncontrolled by the usual measures. The angiographic diagnoses were arteriovenous fistula in 7 patients, pseudoaneurysm in 4, fistula and pseudoaneurysm in 2, and lacerated renal vessels in 2. A total of 15 patients required no further treatment after embolization, while 2 underwent either partial nephrectomy or open exploration. No risk factors for hemorrhage could be identified. We recommend angiography and embolization under 3 conditions; 1) in the immediate postoperative period when clamping of the nephrostomy tube and a tamponade balloon catheter fail to control hemorrhage (24% of our series), 2) in the early postoperative period (2 to 7 days) when the patient requires 3 or 4 units of blood after replacement of the initial blood loss (41% of our series) and 3) for sudden hemorrhage more than 7 days postoperatively (35% of our series).
Holmium:YAG yields smaller fragments compared to electrohydraulic lithotripsy, mechanical lithotripsy or pulsed dye lasers. These findings imply that fragments from holmium:YAG lithotripsy are more likely to pass without problem compared to the other lithotrites. Furthermore, the significant difference in fragment size adds evidence that holmium:YAG lithotripsy involves vaporization.
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.