There
are numerous methods for treating and removing kidney and urinary stones.
Treatments can be classified as either extracorporeal or endoscopic stone
management procedures.
Extracorporeal
shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) treatment uses an ultrasound device to fragment
the stone until it is small enough to be passed through the urethra. This is a
non-invasive outpatient procedure that generally takes one hour to complete and
is performed under local anesthesia. Typically, ESWL is used for small to
medium-sized stones between 1/6 inch and one inch in size. On average, stones
re-form in 20% of ESWL patients because fragments are not completely excreted.
Complications associated with ESWL include blocked urine flow from fragments in
the urinary tract, bleeding and urinary tract infection. In addition, ESWL is
rarely used on cystine kidney stones because these do not break up easily.
Alternatively,
urinary tract stones can be removed or managed using endoscopic procedures
commonly known as ureteroscopies or cystourethroscopies. A transurethral
endoscope carries instruments through the urethra, bladder and ureters in order
to fragment or, if the stones are small enough, remove the stones entirely.
Stone fragmentation is known as lithotripsy. At the present time,
intracorporeal lithotripsy is frequently conducted using Holmium lasers and
devices that deliver kinetic or mechanical energy or intracorporeal shock wave
lithotripsy (ISWL) devices. ISWL is a minimally invasive procedure and can be
performed on patients for whom ultrasound has been deemed ineffective or
insufficient to treat the stones. For urinary tract stones, a ureteroscope is
inserted into the ureters through the urethra and bladder, where shock waves
are delivered to fragment the stones. This report suite discusses pneumatic,
ultrasonic, combination and electrohydraulic lithotripsy.
This
report suite defines intracorporeal non-lithotripsy procedures as endoscopic
removal of stones without fragmenting them first with ISWL. These procedures
use retrieval devices such as alligator forceps or grasping forceps to crush
the stone and remove the fragments or remove the stones whole. In addition,
stone retrieval devices can be used to clinch the stone while treatment is
being applied. The size, shape and location of the stone as well as the
lithotripter being used are the primary determinants of which devices will be
used. Stone retrieval devices can be segmented into two varieties based on
their material. In the past, stainless-steel stone removal baskets were the
standard. However, the emergence of the nitinol basket has shifted the market
despite the cost premium.
Spanning over 69 pages “US
Market Report for Stone Management Devices 2016 - MedCore” report
covers Executive Summary, Research Methodology, Stone Management Device Market.
The report covered companies are - Boston Scientific, Cook Medical, C.R. Bard,
Dornier MedTech, Karl Storz, Olympus, Quanta System, Convergent, EDAP – TMS,
Siemens, Trimedyne, Richard Wolf
For
more information Visit at: http://mrr.cm/JVC
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Healthcare
Reports at: http://www.marketresearchreports.com/healthcare
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