Efficacy of semirigid ureterorenoscopy with the use of ureteral acsess sheath in the treatment of impacted ureteral stones: A prospective randomized study

Authors

  • Ercument Keskin
  • Abdullah Erdogan
  • Ibrahim Karabulut

Keywords:

Impacted ureteral stones, semirigid ureterorenoscopy, ureteral acsess sheath

Abstract

Aim: To investigate the advantages of using Ureteral Access Sheat (UAS) with semirigid ureterorenoscopy in patients with impacted ureteral stones. Materials and Methods: One hundred and 22 adult patients that presented to our clinic with the complaint of impacted stones in the middle and upper parts of the ureter and were scheduled for surgical treatment. The procedure was performed without UAS in control group and using UAS in study group. Results: No significant difference was found between the two groups in terms of age, gender, stone disease history, presentation complaint, stone side, size, density and localization, degree of renal hydronephrosis, complications and length of hospital stay. Stone migration, operation time, duration of fluoroscopy, and postoperative additional surgical intervention rates were significantly lower in the UAS group [26.2% (n = 16) vs 11.5% (n = 7), p = 0.037; 35.46 ± 5.3 min vs 25.56 ± 4.2 min, p 0.001, 5.50 ± 0.86 sec vs 3.24 ± 0.69 sec, p 0.001; and 19.7% (n = 12) vs 6.6% (n = 4), p = 0.032, respectively]. The operation was successful in 48 (78.7%) patients in the control group and 57 (93.4%) in the UAS group, with a statistically significant difference (p = 0.019).Conclusion: The use of UAS in the treatment of middle-upper impacted ureteral stones presents as an advantageous method due to the shorter operation time and lower rates of intraoperative stone migration and high success rates of the operation.

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Published

2021-05-25

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

1.
Efficacy of semirigid ureterorenoscopy with the use of ureteral acsess sheath in the treatment of impacted ureteral stones: A prospective randomized study . Ann Med Res [Internet]. 2021 May 25 [cited 2025 Feb. 23];27(12):3148-52. Available from: http://annalsmedres.org/index.php/aomr/article/view/3611