Tubeless percutaneous nephrolithotomy appears to be safe and efficacious in uneventful procedures, in children, in obese patients, in simultaneous bilateral procedures, in supracostal access and in renal units with coexisting anatomical anomalies. Nephrostomy tube placement should still be considered in certain cases such as those with more than 2 nephrostomy access tracts, those necessitating a second look and those with intraoperative complications such as significant bleeding or collecting system perforation.
This series clearly demonstrates poor rates of surgical salvage, which we mainly attribute to delays in parental response and in primary physician referral to the hospital. Parents, who have a pivotal role in early diagnosis, were usually unaware of this urological emergency, and some were surprisingly unaware of the presence of cryptorchidism. By increasing the awareness regarding this entity among members of the medical community and parents, we hope that torsion of the cryptorchid testis (literally, "hidden testis") will no longer necessarily be synonymous with "crypt-torsion" ("hidden torsion").
Patients with higher body mass index, greater stone burden, nonbranched stones and multiple nephrostomy access tracts are at risk for increased radiation exposure during percutaneous nephrolithotomy. Urologists must seek alternative strategies to minimize radiation exposure, such as tighter collimation to the region of interest, judicious use of magnification and the acquisition of as few images as possible during stone removal.
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