Monday 25 August 2008

Percutaneous Renal Surgery In Children With Complex Stones

�UroToday.com - This study from Turkey reported a pediatric transcutaneous nephrolithotomy have. The radical retrospectively analyzed 105 patients younger than 17 years of historic period who underwent percutaneous nephrolithotomy. The chemical group defined composite calculi as either a staghorn or one with a bulk larger than 3 cm2 and involving more than one calix, the speed ureter, or an anomalous kidney.


The patient's mean age was 9.7 years with a mean stone burden of 6.54 cm2. The mean operative clock time of the PCNL was 90 proceedings. 73.6% of the patients were stone release after one procedure. Almost 40% of the patients required multiple tracts. The average deprivation of hb was 1.6 grams per dl. Both the number and the size of it of the tracts were clinically significant when correlative to the drop in hemoglobin. There was no significant change in creatinine when compared with the number of tracts.


The group over that percutaneous nephrolithotomy is a safe and effective management technique in the treatment of complex nephritic calculi in children. The tract dilation and number of tracts were authoritative factors in reducing profligate loss. Unfortunately, this newspaper would get been stronger if it included nephritic scans preoperatively and postoperative assessments of the impact of numerous tracks in children. This would bear been of great clinical significance, as there get been other studies correlating renal harm with pamphlet size and number. This paper could have put to rest or coagulated any fears with such a large population of children.


Ozden E, Sahin A, Tan B, Dog(an HS, Eren MT, Tekg�l S

J Pediatr Urol. 2008 Aug;4(4):295-8


Reported by UroToday.com Medical Editor Pasquale Casale, MD

UroToday - the only urology website with original content written by global urogenital medicine key opinion leaders actively engaged in clinical practice.


To access the latest urogenital medicine news releases from UroToday, go to:
www.urotoday.com


Copyright � 2008 - UroToday



More info

Friday 15 August 2008

Hollywood Clubber Falls, Falls, Sues

This one makes a case for actually observation "Dancing With the Stars." It's kind of lame, just no one gets hurt, except of course those who deserve to.
Level  3 Lawsuit
Vanesa Ramirez was partying at Level 3 in Hollywood last May, when she slipped on the dance floor, injuring her left ankle. Bouncers gingerly placed Ramirez on a chair ... which broke, sending her to the ground a second time.

Ramirez wants more than $25,000, so at least something won't be broke anymore.

UPDATE: A jury's not gonna like one. Level 3 just got back to us. They say the woman was wearing 6" heels so of course she fell on the dance floor. As for the chair breaking, they say she weighed too much -- 180 lbs.




More info