A total of 56 male spinal cord injury patients on condom catheter drainage was studied prospectively within 6 months of the injuries for 5 years. Low bladder pressures (filling maximum 35 cm. water and voiding maximum 70 cm. water) were ascertained with video-urodynamics. External sphincterotomy was performed when necessary for detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia. Yearly upper tract imaging, serum creatinine levels and urine cultures were obtained. All patients had colonized urine (asymptomatic) during the entire study period. No patient sustained deterioration of the urinary tract on imaging or by serum creatinine determinations during the 5-year interval. We conclude that asymptomatic bacteriuria is of no consequence to the integrity of the upper urinary tract when low pressures are operant.
Urodynamic evaluations were performed in 43 male patients with spinal cord injuries, before any therapeutic decisions, and a minimum of 5 mo following the injury. Results were subdivided according to level of injury. Mean detrusor contraction pressures, incidence of detrusor-sphincter dysynergia (DSD), and incidence of detrusor-bladder neck dysynergia (DBND) were calculated. The incidence pattern of DBND was found to follow closely the incidence pattern of DSD, with the highest incidence among the upper thoracic injuries, considerably more than among the cervical injuries. A significantly higher resting detrusor pressure differential was found among the patients with DBND. This was felt to represent sympathetic dysfunction and poor accommodation and is proposed to be secondary to adrenergic detrusor neoinnervation.
A total of 32 male patients with spinal cord injury underwent extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. The mean stone burden was 2.9 cm. (range 0.2 to 8.0 cm.) per renal unit. Of 41 renal units 27 (66 per cent) required ancillary endourological procedures preoperatively and 32 (78 per cent) required a single treatment with extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. Urine cultures were positive in 30 of 32 patients (94 per cent) before treatment. All patients with positive preextracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy urine cultures also had positive cultures after treatment. Followup (3-month) was available for 26 of 41 renal units (63 per cent) and showed 19 (73 per cent) to be free of stones or without any radiographic evidence of calcification overlying the collecting system. Seven staghorn calculi were treated with extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy without prior debulking procedures. Two partial staghorn calculi were treated and rendered free of stones. None of the 5 kidneys with full staghorn calculi was rendered free of stones. We conclude that extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy is effective for the treatment of unbranched and partial staghorn calculi in the spinal cord injury patient. However, extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy alone is less effective for the treatment of full staghorn calculi.
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