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Iatrogenic foreign body in urinary bladder: Holmium laser vs. Ceramic, and the winner is…
Castellani, Daniele; Gasparri, Luca; Claudini, Redi; Pavia, Maria Pia; Branchi, Alessandro; Dellabella, Marco.
  • Castellani, Daniele; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
  • Gasparri, Luca; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
  • Claudini, Redi; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
  • Pavia, Maria Pia; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
  • Branchi, Alessandro; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
  • Dellabella, Marco; IRCCS-INRCA. Department of Urology. Ancona. IT
Int. braz. j. urol ; 45(4): 853-853, July-Aug. 2019.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1040056
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Introduction Urological surgery is estimated to be the third most common cause of iatrogenic-retained foreign bodies 1. Presentation A 76-year old man was undergoing a transurethral resection of bladder tumor with a 26-Ch continuous flow resectoscope (Karl Storz, Germany). Before starting resection, a detachment of resectoscope sheath tip was noted. The ceramic tip was free-floating in the bladder lumen, and it would not fit within the sheath, making direct extraction using the loop impossible. An attempt was made to break it with a stone punch, but it was unsuccessful due to impossibility of closing it in the branches. Therefore, we decided to fragment the tip with holmium laser (RevoLix®, LISA Laser products, Germany), using an 800-micron, front-firing fiber. Laser device was settled at with 2.5 J energy and 5 Hz frequency. Ceramic appeared very hard, but it was difficult to carry on breaking with this setting because of tip retropulsion. Then, laser setting was switched to lower energy and higher frequency (1 J and 13 Hz). This setting guaranteed the same power of 13 W, but with minimal retropulsion. Results Tip was fragmented against the posterior bladder wall in seven pieces, which were retrieved trough the outer sheath. A total 5.62 kJ were used to fragment it. At the end, superficial lesions of the posterior bladder wall were highlighted. Surgical time was 55 minutes. Patient was discharged home next day without problems. Conclusions Holmium laser fragmentation is a safe and effective approach to remove foreign bodies from the bladder.
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Full text: Available Index: LILACS (Americas) Main subject: Urinary Bladder / Ceramics / Equipment Failure / Lasers, Solid-State / Foreign Bodies Limits: Aged / Humans / Male Language: English Journal: Int. braz. j. urol Journal subject: Urology Year: 2019 Type: Article Affiliation country: Italy Institution/Affiliation country: IRCCS-INRCA/IT

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Full text: Available Index: LILACS (Americas) Main subject: Urinary Bladder / Ceramics / Equipment Failure / Lasers, Solid-State / Foreign Bodies Limits: Aged / Humans / Male Language: English Journal: Int. braz. j. urol Journal subject: Urology Year: 2019 Type: Article Affiliation country: Italy Institution/Affiliation country: IRCCS-INRCA/IT