Case report of a giant kidney stone removed by transperitoneal laparoscopic pyelolithotomy
Ruslan N. Trushkin, Teymur K. Isaev, Pavel E. Medvedev, Petr P. Teihrib, Mariana A. Lysenko, Ilya V. Dmitriev, Aslan G. Balkarov, Tuong Lan Ho

TL;DR
A 55-year-old woman had a large kidney stone successfully removed using a minimally invasive laparoscopic procedure, preserving her kidney function.
Contribution
This is the first documented case of a giant kidney stone over 200 g removed via laparoscopic pyelolithotomy without nephrectomy.
Findings
A 55-year-old patient had a large staghorn stone removed laparoscopically from a functioning kidney.
The procedure was successful with no complications and a short hospital stay.
Laparoscopic pyelolithotomy proved safe and effective for large kidney stones when kidney function is salvageable.
Abstract
In cases of long-standing giant kidney stones resulting in irreversible loss of renal function, frequent urinary tract infections and a chronic flank pain that cannot be managed by other treatment options nephrectomy is considered the only effective treatment option. The largest KS documented in the literature weighed 2260 g and was treated by nephrectomy; while the largest stone removed without nephrectomy weighed 1350 g. There are no documented cases of KS over 200 g being removed by laparoscopic surgery. The preserved excretory function supported proceeding with pyelolithotomy rather than nephrectomy. We hereby present a case of a giant KS in a functioning kidney of the female patient. She had previously (> 15 years ago) undergone an open left nephrolithotomy which made the procedure more challenging. She underwent successful transperitoneal laparoscopic pyelolithotomy. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsKidney Stones and Urolithiasis Treatments · Pediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies · Ureteral procedures and complications
