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1.
Urology ; 116: 213-217, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29596866

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine if an innovative extracorporeal electrohydraulic shock wave (SW) device (sparker array [SPA]) can effectively fracture artificial stones in vitro and in vivo, and if SPA treatment produces a renal lesion in our pig model of lithotripsy injury. Results of these experiments will be used to help evaluate the suitability of this device as a clinical lithotripter. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ultracal-30 artificial stones were placed in a holder at the focus of the SPA and treated with 600 SWs (21.6 kV, 60 shocks/min). Stone fragments were collected, dried, and weighed to determine stone breakage. In vivo stone breakage entailed implanting stones into pigs. These stones were treated with 600 or 1200 SWs and the fragments were collected for analysis. Lesion analysis consisted of treating the left kidney of pigs with 1200 or 2400 SWs and quantitating the hemorrhagic lesion. RESULTS: In vitro, 71% ± 2% of each artificial stone was fractured to <2 mm in size. In vivo stone breakage averaged 63%. Renal injury analysis revealed that only 1 of 7 kidneys showed evidence of hemorrhagic injury in the treated area. CONCLUSION: The SPA consistently comminuted artificial stones demonstrating its ability to fracture stones like other lithotripters. Also, the SPA caused little to no renal injury at the settings used in this study. These findings suggest further research is warranted to determine the potential of this device as a clinical lithotripter.


Subject(s)
Kidney Calculi/surgery , Kidney/pathology , Lithotripsy/adverse effects , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Glomerular Filtration Rate , Humans , Lithotripsy/instrumentation , Sus scrofa
2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 142(5): 3147, 2017 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29195423

ABSTRACT

In this paper, an extracorporeal shock wave source composed of small ellipsoidal sparker units is described. The sparker units were arranged in an array designed to produce a coherent shock wave of sufficient strength to fracture kidney stones. The objective of this paper was to measure the acoustical output of this array of 18 individual sparker units and compare this array to commercial lithotripters. Representative waveforms acquired with a fiber-optic probe hydrophone at the geometric focus of the sparker array indicated that the sparker array produces a shock wave (P+ ∼40-47 MPa, P- ∼2.5-5.0 MPa) similar to shock waves produced by a Dornier HM-3 or Dornier Compact S. The sparker array's pressure field map also appeared similar to the measurements from a HM-3 and Compact S. Compared to the HM-3, the electrohydraulic technology of the sparker array produced a more consistent SW pulse (shot-to-shot positive pressure value standard deviation of ±4.7 MPa vs ±3.3 MPa).


Subject(s)
High-Energy Shock Waves , Lithotripsy/instrumentation , Ultrasonics , Equipment Design , Fiber Optic Technology , Motion , Pressure , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Time Factors , Transducers, Pressure , Ultrasonics/instrumentation
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