"Milk of calcium renal stone" (liquid renal calculosis) is a quite uncommon lithiasis distinguished by the presence of a semiliquid suspension of calcium salts or a "seed-like" sediment in a caliceal diverticulum or an ectasia segment of the collecting system. We reviewed 5 patients (1 male and 4 females, mean age 48.6 years), with a history of urinary tract infection, renal pain or haematuria. All patients underwent renal ultrasonographic assessment in both clinostatic and orthostatic position. Three patients underwent intravenous pyelography before ultrasound. Ultrasonography showed a sonolucent "levelled" image with a posterior acoustic shadow inside a hydro-caliceal dilation (2 pts.) or caliceal diverticulum (3 pts.); the persistence of the "level" in both clinostatic and orthostatic position allowed an immediate diagnosis in all patients. Intravenous pyelography performed before renal ultrasound showed no abnormality in 1 patient and was misleading in two; it otherwise confirmed the diagnosis when performed after renal ultrasonography. Three patients underwent surgery, two patients refused therapy; sonographic follow-up showed no evolution of the morphologic picture. Once considered as exceptional, liquid renal calculosis still remains rare pathology and accounts for 0.6% of all the urinary lithiasis diagnosed by ultrasound in our series. An accurate sonographic assessment allows a reliable diagnosis of this particular lithiasis and an easy discrimination from solid lithiasis, nephrocalcinosis, medullary sponge kidney and hydropyonephrosis. Hence, a correct diagnosis of this rare condition lets uneffective and improper treatments be avoided.

Virgili, G., Rosi, P., Tamburro, F., Valitutti, M., Torelli, F., Vespasiani, G., et al. (1996). [Milk of calcium renal stone: echographic diagnosis]. ARCHIVIO ITALIANO DI UROLOGIA ANDROLOGIA, 68(5 Suppl), 111-115.

[Milk of calcium renal stone: echographic diagnosis]

VIRGILI, GUIDO;VESPASIANI, GIUSEPPE;
1996-12-01

Abstract

"Milk of calcium renal stone" (liquid renal calculosis) is a quite uncommon lithiasis distinguished by the presence of a semiliquid suspension of calcium salts or a "seed-like" sediment in a caliceal diverticulum or an ectasia segment of the collecting system. We reviewed 5 patients (1 male and 4 females, mean age 48.6 years), with a history of urinary tract infection, renal pain or haematuria. All patients underwent renal ultrasonographic assessment in both clinostatic and orthostatic position. Three patients underwent intravenous pyelography before ultrasound. Ultrasonography showed a sonolucent "levelled" image with a posterior acoustic shadow inside a hydro-caliceal dilation (2 pts.) or caliceal diverticulum (3 pts.); the persistence of the "level" in both clinostatic and orthostatic position allowed an immediate diagnosis in all patients. Intravenous pyelography performed before renal ultrasound showed no abnormality in 1 patient and was misleading in two; it otherwise confirmed the diagnosis when performed after renal ultrasonography. Three patients underwent surgery, two patients refused therapy; sonographic follow-up showed no evolution of the morphologic picture. Once considered as exceptional, liquid renal calculosis still remains rare pathology and accounts for 0.6% of all the urinary lithiasis diagnosed by ultrasound in our series. An accurate sonographic assessment allows a reliable diagnosis of this particular lithiasis and an easy discrimination from solid lithiasis, nephrocalcinosis, medullary sponge kidney and hydropyonephrosis. Hence, a correct diagnosis of this rare condition lets uneffective and improper treatments be avoided.
dic-1996
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/24 - UROLOGIA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Body Fluids; Diagnosis, Differential; Calcium; Suspensions; Humans; Adult; Aged; Middle Aged; Male; Kidney Calculi; Female
Virgili, G., Rosi, P., Tamburro, F., Valitutti, M., Torelli, F., Vespasiani, G., et al. (1996). [Milk of calcium renal stone: echographic diagnosis]. ARCHIVIO ITALIANO DI UROLOGIA ANDROLOGIA, 68(5 Suppl), 111-115.
Virgili, G; Rosi, P; Tamburro, F; Valitutti, M; Torelli, F; Vespasiani, G; Porena, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/66091
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