Korean J Urol.  2001 May;42(5):476-482.

Therapeutic Experience of Domestic SDS-3000 Lithotriptor in 440 Patients with Urinary Stone

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Urology, College of Medicine, Pusan National University, Busan, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE: We studied to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the domestic SDS-3000(R) extracorporeal shock wave lithotriptor (SWL).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Between October 1995 and April 2000, 440 patients, 16 to 79 years old, were treated with the domestic SDS-3000(R) lithotriptor using C-arm fluoroscopy without regional or general anesthesia. Distribution of stones, location and size of stones, session, success rate, causes of failure and complications of SWL were retrospectively reviewed.
RESULTS
Of 440 patients, renal stones were 133 (30.2%) and ureteral stones 307 (69.8%). The overall success rate (stone free rate) of SDS-3000(R) lithotriptor in 440 patients was 89.8% (81.4%) with 94.9% (91.0%) in 5-9mm, 87.2% (75.8%) in 10-19mm, 66.7% (42.8%) in 20-29mm and 57.1% (35.7%) over 30mm of stone size. The success rate was 94.9% for stones between 5-9mm in diameters and 82.6% for stones more than 10mm (p<0.05). As compaired with success rate for stones less then 20mm, stones more then 20mm had significently higher success rate (92.1% Vs 62.8%) (p<0.05). Ureter stones were more successfully treated than renal stones (93.2% Vs 82.0%) (p<0.05). Main complications of SWL were renal colic in 10.0%, steinstrasse in 4.3%, transient gross hematuria in 1.8% and fever in 1.1%. All of complications were controlled with conservative treatment.
CONCLUSIONS
The domestic SDS-3000(R) lithotriptor monotherapy is considered to be a safe and efficient outpatient procedure for the initial treatment of urinary stones.

Keyword

Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy; Lithotriptor; Urinary stone

MeSH Terms

Aged
Anesthesia, General
Fever
Fluoroscopy
Hematuria
Humans
Outpatients
Renal Colic
Retrospective Studies
Shock
Ureter
Urinary Calculi*
Full Text Links
  • KJU
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr