early - investigations to be performed on admission
urine dipstix for microscopic haematuria:
may be negative in pelvi-ureteric junction obstruction (1)
urine microscopy, culture and sensitivity - testing the urine for blood, pus cells and evidence of infection
assessment of renal function - serum urea, creatinine, electrolytes (1,2)
NICE suggest (3):
urgent (within 24 hours of presentation) low-dose non-contrast CT to adults with suspected renal colic. If a woman is pregnant, offer ultrasound instead of CT
non-contrast computed tomography of the kidneys, ureters, and bladder (CT KUB) is the firstline investigation (sensitivity ~95%, specificity ~98%) (4)
however, ultrasound is indicated for children and pregnant women (sensitivity ~84%, specificity ~53%)
urgent (within 24 hours of presentation) ultrasound as first-line imaging for children and young people with suspected renal colic
if there is still uncertainty about the diagnosis of renal colic after ultrasound for children and young people, consider low-dose non-contrast CT
abdominal radiology:
90% of stones are radio-opaque
only urate and xanthine stones are translucent
it is important to request imaging of the kidney, ureter and bladder so as not to miss stones in the lower ureter or the vesicoureteric junction
intravenous urogram - now rarely used:
will confirm the diagnosis and show the position of obstruction
is best performed acutely
abdominal ultrasound is an alternative
contraindicated if there is a clear history of allergy to contrast material
noncontrast Helical (spiral) CT
used increasingly in the initial assessment of renal colic
fast and accurate, and it readily identifies all stone types in all locations
sensitivity (95 to 100 percent) and specificity (94 to 96 percent) suggest that it may definitively exclude stones in patients with abdominal pain
associated features of renal colic such ass renal enlargement, perinephric or periureteral inflammation or "stranding," and distension of the collecting system or ureter, are sensitive indicators of the degree of ureteral obstruction
density of calculi may be used to distinguish cystine and uric acid stones from calcium-bearing stones and is capable of further subtyping the calcium stones into calcium phosphate, calcium oxalate monohydrate and calcium oxalate dihydrate stones
also useful in diagnosing nonurologic causes of abdominal pain, such as abdominal aortic aneurysms and cholelithiasis
its emergence as the definitive initial imaging modality for urolithiasis allows intravenous pyelography to be mainly reserved for therapeutic planning in complex stone cases
late - investigations to be performed as the acute episode is resolving
investigations to be performed once the initial diagnosis of a urinary calculus has been made include (1,2):
24-hour urinary collections for calcium, phosphate and and uric acid excretion, and creatinine clearance; ideally, at home, on a normal diet with clear instructions given to the patient
renography - to assess the degree of renal outflow obstruction; necessary if conservative treatment planned
biochemical analysis of recovered stones
NICE state with respect to metabollic testing (3):
metabolic testing
consider stone analysis for adults with ureteric or renal stones
measure serum calcium for adults with ureteric or renal stones
consider referring children and young people with ureteric or renal stones to a paediatric nephrologist or paediatric urologist with expertise in this area for assessment and metabolic investigations
Reference:
1. Portis AJ, Sundaram , CP.Diagnosis and Initial Management of Kidney Stones. American Family Physician 2001.
2. Mostafavi MR et al. Accurate determination of chemical composition of urinary calculi by spiral computerized tomography. J Urol 1998;159:673-5
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