Abstract

To review the precautions to be observed before and during extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients with a cardiac pacemaker and the safety of bilateral ESWL performed on the same day. A case report of bilateral ESWL in a SCI patient with a permanent cardiac pacemaker. The Regional Spinal Injuries Centre, Southport, the Lithotripsy Unit, the Royal Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Trust, Liverpool, and the Department of Cardiology, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Manchester, UK. A 43-year-old male sustained a T-4 fracture and developed paraplegia with a sensory level at T-2. During the post-injury period, he developed episodes of asystole requiring implantation of a dual chamber (DDD) permanent pacemaker. Twenty-one months later, he developed a right ureteric calculus with hydronephrosis. A radio-opaque shadow was seen in the left kidney with no hydronephrosis. During right ureteric stenting, the ureteric stone was pushed into the renal pelvis. 1,500 shock waves were delivered to this stone on the right side, followed by ESWL to the left intra-renal stone with 1250 shock waves. The patient tolerated ESWL to both kidneys. The pacemaker was reprogrammed to a single chamber ventricular pacing mode at 30 beats per minute with a reduced sensitivity during lithotripsy. There were no untoward cardiac events during or after lithotripsy. The serum creatinine was 45 micromol/l before lithotripsy and 44 micromol/l two weeks after ESWL. SCI patients with a cardiac pacemaker may be able to undergo extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy following temporary reprogramming of the pacemaker. Bilateral, simultaneous ESWL is safe in the vast majority of patients provided that there is no risk of simultaneous ureteric obstruction by stone fragments. However, it should be remembered that a decrease in renal function could occur following bilateral ESWL of renal calculi.

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