1. Clinical determination of the natural distensibility of the human ureter: initial study.
- Author
-
Ali, Sohrab N., McCormac, Amanda, Cumpanas, Andrei D., Altamirano‐Villarroel, Jaime, Piedras, Paul, Vu, Minh‐Chau, Afyouni, Andrew S., Tano, Zachary E., Osann, Kathryn, Klopfer, Michael, Jiang, Pengbo, Patel, Roshan M., Landman, Jaime, and Clayman, Ralph V.
- Subjects
- *
URINARY tract infections , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *ODDS ratio , *TAMSULOSIN , *URETERS - Abstract
Objectives Patients and Methods Results Conclusion To define the natural distensibility of the human ureter and evaluate the impact of other possibly favourable factors on ureteric distensibility.A total of 101 patients undergoing ureteroscopic stone removal or percutaneous nephrolithotomy underwent ureteric sizing using sequential passage of 37‐cm urethral dilators in 2‐F increments while attached to a unique force sensor. Insertion forces were limited to 6 N. After 6 N was attained, an appropriately sized ureteric access sheath was passed. At the conclusion of each procedure, Post‐Ureteroscopic Lesion Scale score was determined.Urethral dilators were passed in 61% of patients at ≤14 F; 39% of patients accepted urethral dilators of ≥16 F. The mean dilator size was 14 F. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that preprocedural ureteric stenting and antibiotic use favoured passage of 16‐F dilators (odds ratio [OR] 5.16, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.70–15.62 [P = 0.004] and OR 5.15, 95% CI 1.743–15.243 [P = 0.003], respectively). Neither tamsulosin nor prior urinary tract infection had an impact on ureteric size (OR 0.765, 95% CI 0.281–2.084 [P = 0.601], OR 1.049, 95% CI 0.269–4.089 [P = 0.945], respectively).Using continuous insertion force monitoring and a 6‐N threshold, the majority of unstented adult human ureters within our patient population safely accommodated a 14‐F dilator. Safe passage of a 16‐F dilator at the 6‐N threshold was more likely among patients with a preexisting indwelling ureteric stent or patients who were treated with antibiotics within a week of the procedure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF