Introduction: Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) is one of the main approaches for the treatment of large and complex stones in pediatric patients. The patient position for PCNL has been classically divided into prone or supine and the prone position is more commonly used. One of the most feared complications of this surgical technique is colon injury and the objective of this work is to evaluate the incidence of retrorenal colon (RRC) both supine and prone position, in pediatric patients, through radiological images.
Materials and method: A retrosepctive review was performed of all abdominal CT scans performed in one center, in patients under 18 years since 2017 to 2019. The ideal path for percutaneous puncture was traced in the upper, middle, and lower calyces of both kidneys in the prone and supine positions and contact with the kidney and adjacent organs was evaluated, with a uro-radiologist. Chi-square test and Student's t test were applied.
Results: 50 CT-scans were performed on 44 children. Patients had a mean age of 12.6 years and 71.4% were male. Twenty-five scans were performed in the prone and 25 in the supine position. The incidence of RRC for the left kidney (LK) was significantly higher in the lower calyx in prone position than in the supine position, 28% vs 4% (p = 0.049), and the right kidney (RK) presented RRC only in the prone position. The liver was the most frequent retrorenal organ (97.7%) for the RK, with a non-significant difference by position, while for the LK the spleen was the most frequent (61.1%).
Discussion: Colon injury is one of the most morbid complication in PCNL and one of the reasons to perform a CT scan before surgery, on which its incidence appears to be <1% in adults. The present study revealed RRC to be present in three (12%) patients in the supine position and seven (28%) patients in the prone position (p=0.15). These results were slightly higher from those reported in adults (supine: 1.7%-10%; prone: 6.8%-20%), but there are no reports in the literature on this issue to allow appropriate comparison. This is the first study to attempt to assess the incidence of RRC in children according to position.
Conclusion: The incidence of RRC for an ideal puncture was significantly higher in the lower calyx of the left kidney in the prone position than in the supine position, and in the right kidney, the RRC only occurred in the prone position.
Keywords: Pediatric stone disease; Percutaneous nephrolithotomy; Prone position; Supine position.
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