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  4. Laser-guided real-time automatic target identification for endoscopic stone lithotripsy: A two-arm in vivo porcine comparison study
 
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2021
Journal Article
Title

Laser-guided real-time automatic target identification for endoscopic stone lithotripsy: A two-arm in vivo porcine comparison study

Abstract
Introduction and objective Thermal injuries associated with Holmium laser lithotripsy of the urinary tract are an underestimated problem in stone therapy. Surgical precision relies exclusively on visual target identification when applying laser energy for stone disintegration. This study evaluates a laser system that enables target identification automatically during bladder stone lithotripsy, URS, and PCNL in a porcine animal model. Methods Holmium laser lithotripsy was performed on two domestic pigs by an experienced endourology surgeon in vivo. Human stone fragments (4-6 mm) were inserted in both ureters, renal pelvises, and bladders. Ho:YAG laser lithotripsy was conducted as a two-arm comparison study, evaluating the target identification system against common lithotripsy. We assessed the ureters' lesions according to PULS and the other locations descriptively. Post-mortem nephroureterectomy and cystectomy specimens were examined by a pathologist. Results The sufficient disintegration of stone samples was achieved in both setups. Endoscopic examination revealed numerous lesions in the urinary tract after the commercial Holmium laser system. The extent of lesions with the feedback system was semi-quantitatively and qualitatively lower. The energy applied was significantly less, with a mean reduction of more than 30% (URS 27.1%, PCNL 52.2%, bladder stone lithotripsy 17.1%). Pathology examination revealed only superficial lesions in both animals. There was no evidence of organ perforation in either study arm. Conclusions Our study provides proof-of-concept for a laser system enabling automatic real-time target identification during lithotripsy on human urinary stones. Further studies in humans are necessary, and to objectively quantify this new system's advantages, investigations involving a large number of cases are mandatory.
Author(s)
Schlager, Daniel
Univ. Freiburg
Schulte, Antonia
Univ. Freiburg
Schütz, Jan  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Physikalische Messtechnik IPM  
Brandenburg, Albrecht  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Physikalische Messtechnik IPM  
Schell, Christoph
Univ. Freiburg
Lamrini, Samir
LISA Laser Products GmbH
Vogel, Markus
LISA Laser Products GmbH
Teichmann, Heinrich-Otto
LISA Laser Products GmbH
Miernik, Arkadiusz
Univ. Freiburg
Journal
World journal of urology  
Funder
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung BMBF (Deutschland)  
Open Access
DOI
10.1007/s00345-020-03452-0
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Physikalische Messtechnik IPM  
Keyword(s)
  • laser lithotripsy

  • Holmium laser

  • autofluorescence

  • feedback control

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