We present our experience with three different lithotriptors: Dornier HM3, EDAP LT02 and Piezolith 2300. Materials and methods: 1876 patients with ureteral stones were treated between 1 January 1988 and 1 January 1996. The above 3 lithotriptors were used. In 925 patients the stones were located in the upper ureter, in 182 in the middle ureter and in 769 in the pelvic ureter. Auxiliary procedures were performed in 37% of patients. A DJ stent was used to catheterise 299 (16%) patients and a nephrostomy was performed in 19 (1%). Catheterisation was carried out in 247 (13.1%) ureters to localise the stones, plus 83 (4.4%) push ups and 52 (2.7%) Dormia baskets. Results: one treatment was sufficient in 1395 (74.3%) patients, 2 treatments in 335 (29.1%), 3 in 114 (6%), 4 in 21 (1.1%), 5 in 10 (0.5%) and 6 in 1 (0.05%). Patients were considered stone-free when they had negative X-ray and sonography two months after treatment; stones smaller than 3 mm, capable of being spontaneously eliminated without retrograde dilatation, were considered as fragments. The results were 1475 (78.6%) stone-free patients, 246 (13.1%) with fragments and 117 (6.2%) failures. 38 patients failed to appear at follow-up. Complications: complications were considered as hyperpyrexia and colics. There was very little hematuria, which regressed spontaneously in any case within the first 24 hours. Conclusion: side effects were few and required no treatment, so in our experience lithotripsy is the first choice treatment for ureteral stones. Particular attention, however, must be paid to the size of the stone in predicting the number of treatments.