Introduction and importance With the strong development of percutaneous nephrolithotomy as well as other less invasive procedures, the indication of open surgery for the treatment of nephrolithiasis has been significantly… Click to show full abstract
Introduction and importance With the strong development of percutaneous nephrolithotomy as well as other less invasive procedures, the indication of open surgery for the treatment of nephrolithiasis has been significantly reduced and is only applied in selective cases. Case presentation A 55-year-old male was admitted to the Department of Urology due to fever and left flank pain. Clinical examination and imaged studies reveal staghorn calculi in the right kidney and infected hydronephrosis with multiple stones on the left side. The stone removal surgery was performed in 2 sessions, left first - right after. The two operations came out with no peri- or post-operative complication, no blood transfusion. Clinical discussion The two reasons for the indication of open surgery instead of percutaneous nephrolithotomy were i/ the stone's sizes were very large and very hard, and ii/ the multi-tract nephrolithotomy increased the risks of blood transfusion and parenchymal's damage. Also, a long-time and difficult nephroscopy was not the good choice for the left-infected hydronephrosis. Conclusion Open stone surgery is still a good alternative approach for kidney complex stone burden, especially infected hydronephrosis.
               
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