AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates whether noninvasive CT scans can detect interstitial calcium phosphate deposits (Randall's plaques) and duct of Bellini plugs, which may lead to kidney stones.
  • The method involved endoscopic visualization and image analysis of kidney papillae from 105 patients during stone removal surgery, alongside blinded radiologist assessments of pre- and post-surgical CT scans.
  • Results indicate that while CT scans accurately identified ductal plugs with 81% sensitivity, they were not effective at detecting Randall's plaques, suggesting limitations in current CT technology for this purpose.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the ability of noninvasive computed tomography (CT) scans to detect interstitial calcium phosphate deposits (Randall's plaques) and duct of Bellini plugs, which are possible stone precursor lesions.

Methods: At time of percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) for stone removal, all accessible individual papillae of 105 patients were endoscopically visualized and video recorded. Image-processing software was used to estimate the percentage of papillary surface occupied by plaque or plug in each pole (upper, middle, lower). The location of stones was also recorded. A radiologist blinded to the mapping results scored presurgical (n = 98) and postsurgical (n = 105) abdominal CT scans for the presence or absence of calcification by pole.

Results: The cohort was a mean age of 56 years (range, 23-84 years). Maximum papillary surface area of each area of the kidney occupied by plug correlated with CT calcifications on pre- and postprocedure images by rank sum test. However, maximum plaque surface area did not correlate with radiographic findings (P = .10-.90 for each pole by rank sum test). Sensitivity was 81% and specificity was 69% of CT to detect plugs of at least 1% of the papillary surface area.

Conclusion: Calcifications seen on current generation clinical CT scans correspond to ductal plugging involving at least 1% of the papillary surface area. Current clinical CT scan technology appears inadequate for detecting Randall's plaques.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3744363PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2013.04.028DOI Listing

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