In concentric laminated uric acid samples two different sound velocities are observed with very different values, the one in the organic matrix varies from 670 to 1170 m s(-1), the other in the crystalline layers between 3200 and 5300 m s(-1). This large difference illustrates the importance of the internal stone structure on the fracture behaviour of urinary stones and reveals the weakness of the actual disintegration models, attributing the destructive effect of shock waves on the differences in acoustical impedance at the water/stone interface and not on the differences in acoustical impedance at the matrix/crystalline interfaces inside the urinary calculus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe damage induced by an extracorporeal shock wave lithotripter is observed with a fiber optic stress sensing technique. When a stone is placed in the focus, besides the expected stress induced by the incoming shock wave emitted by the ESWL apparatus, a second delayed stress is observed some hundreds of microseconds later. The second stress is induced by a shock wave generated at the collapse of a cavitation bubble.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rarefaction shock wave results in a liquid failure at the target/fluid interface. In the wake of the reflected ESWL-induced shock wave, a macroscopic cavity is generated in filtered water. The cavity implosion induces a large shock wave, divulging the bubble existence and lifetime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn vitro extracoporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) on different types of urinary calculi, in combination with microfocus x-ray and microphotography, illustrates the importance of the internal stone structure. Calculi with a rough surface layered structure (calcium oxalate monohydrate) and untextured calculi (cystine) are characterized by a low stone fragility, whereas coarse-grain calculi (calcium oxalate dihydrate, struvite), and calculi with a smooth surface layered structure (uric acid), are very fragile. Shell-like fragmentation in layered calculi, with smooth surface of the crystalline laminations, suggests that the stone matrix influenced the propagation of the shock wave energy inside the stone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-six urinary stones were studied by computed tomography and bone densitometry in order to find a correlation between the chemical composition of the stones and the densitometric data. In vitro, the more common cases of lithiasis can be divided into 3 main groups: uric acid, cystine and the calcium salts, e.g.
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