Abstract

Introduction: Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy (PCNL) is the recommended treatment for renal calculi. The tract dilatation method has a significant effect on the surgical outcome. One- shot Dilatation (OSD) involves dilatation using the dilator and Amplatz of desired size, while Serial Dilatation (SD) involves increasing the dilator size progressively up to the desired size. Aim: To compare the success and complication rates of SD techniques and OSD technique using Amplatz dilators. Materials and Methods: This was a randomised control study, conducted in a Tertiary Care Centre, of Bharati Hospital, Pune, Maharashtra, India, from March 2020 to December 2021. A non-probability sampling technique was followed and hundred consecutive patients of renal calculus were included in the study. The patients were then randomly allocated using random number table to undergo PCNL via a One-shot Dilatation (OSD-group I) or Serial Dilatation (SD-group II) of access tract. After the initial work up, the patients underwent PCNL, tract dilated as per the group enrolled. The two groups were then compared for patient demographics, stone characteristics (size, number, location), dilatation type, access time, tract size, access quality, bleeding at entry, operative time, radiation time, postoperative analgesic requirement, tube or tubeless procedure, time for removal of the nephrostomy tube and double ‘J’ stent placement. The statistical inference was obtained by Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) , Kruskall- Wallis t-test, Fisher’s exact test or Chi-square test. Significance was termed as a p-value<0.05. The analysis was performed on Pvalue.io. Results: In the patients from group I, there was lesser blood loss (Haemoglobin drop 0.9 vs 1.3 gm/dL), clot at entry( 6% vs 28%), and radiation exposure ( 60.9 sec vs 94.1 sec) as compared to group II patients. This was also reflected in reduced mean operative time (46.2 min vs 57.1 min) and lesser duration of hospital stay (3 vs 4 days) among group I patients. conclusion: The OSD was found to be superior to SD using Amplatz dilatation in PCNL in terms of having reduced blood loss and reduced exposure to radiation for the patient.

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