View clinical trials related to Kidney Calculi.
Filter by:Residual fragments of urinary calculi after flexible ureteroscopy (URF) can cause symptoms and additional surgeries. The assessment of residual fragments by imaging is not standardized. Computed tomography (CT) is the best way for evaluation of urinary stones, however, ionizing radiation from CT is deleterious. The aim of this study is to define which patients may avoid CT for evaluation of residual fragments after URF. 115 patients with > 18 years old undergoing URF for kidney stone < 20 mm or < 15 mm in the lower calyx diagnosed by CT will be studied. The clinical evaluation of patients will be held by the same urologist in pre-operative consultation, 7 days after the procedure, 30 days after the procedure and 100 days after the procedure. The assessment of residual fragments will be made through TC, ultrasound and Kidney-bladder-ureter KUB 90 days after the procedure. The image methods for residual fragments assessment will be compared by Cochran Test and prediction of parameters to avoid CT will be made by multiple logistic regression, using IPSS 16.0, with significant level of 5%.
Purpose: to investigate the postoperative outcomes of Retrograde intrarenal surgery versus percutaneous nephrolithotomy in 2 to 4 cm kidney stones.
This study evaluates the safety and efficacy of the novel tip-flexible semi-rigid ureterorenoscope for the treatment of renal calculi using a prospective, randomized multicentre trial design. Half of participants will receive retrograde intrarenal surgery using the tip-flexible semi-rigid ureterorenoscope, while the other half participants will receive retrograde intrarenal surgery using the classic flexible ureteroscope.
Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) is a surgical procedure that is standard of care for the removal of large kidney stones. PCNL involves removal of the stone(s) from the kidney through a temporary tract that is percutaneously placed through the patient's back during surgery. There is a significant risk of urinary tract infection after PCNL but wide clinical variation in use of prophylactic antibiotics in the days leading up to surgery. For patients who had already agreed to undergo PCNL, we plan to randomize them either to 1 week of preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis plus < 24 hours of perioperative IV antibiotics or to < 24 hours of perioperative IV antibiotics only. We will then compare the rates of infectious complications following PCNL for the two groups.
The purpose of this study is to ascertain whether certain supplements promote excessive urinary oxalate excretion and increase the risk for calcium oxalate kidney stones. Supplements that enhance urinary oxalate excretion, as a result of their oxalate concentration or from some other mechanism (e.g., providing substrate for oxalate biosynthesis) will be identified by the investigators.
When patients are going to have surgery to remove large kidney stones (percutaneous nephrolithotomy [PCNL]), it is not clear whether the patients benefit from a course of prophylactic preoperative oral antibiotics; currently both the use of prophylactic preoperative oral antibiotics and no prophylactic oral antibiotics are considered to be within standard-of-care. This study will randomize patients to preoperative prophylactic antibiotics or no antibiotics to determine if the use of preoperative prophylactic antibiotics decreases the postoperative risk of localized urinary tract infection (UTI) and/or systemic infection that started in the urinary tract (sepsis or urosepsis).
The aim of this research is to determine an effective antibiotic regimen following definitive surgical therapy of kidney stones caused by bacterial infection (struvite stones).
The aim of the study is to evaluate the predictors of success of oral dissolution therapy in radiolucent renal stones in a large series of patients from a tertiary referral center in order to define the optimum case scenarios where oral dissolution therapy could be implemented.
The purpose of this study is to compare the postoperative systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) rates undergoing retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) after multiple-, single-, zero-dose of ceftriaxone prophylaxis in a prospective randomized trail. The investigators will enroll 450 patients who are candidates for RIRS in the investigators study. By simple random sampling technique, patients will be assigned to three groups (multiple-, single-, zero-dose of ceftriaxone prophylaxis,respectively). In addition to the difference of usage of ciprofloxacin prophylaxis, the rest of the procedure is the same in all three groups.The end point of the study is the comparison of outcome of procedure including SIRS rate, stone free rate (SFR), operation time, length of stay,and hematuresis.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of ALLN-177 to reduce urinary oxalate excretion in patients with recurring kidney stones and enteric or idiopathic hyperoxaluria.