Abstract
Objective:
The objective is to review the published literature on the aetiology and evidence-based management of stone disease in the spinal cord-injured patient.
Methods:
A PubMed and Medline search was performed using the terms ‘spinal cord injury’, ‘paraplegia’, ‘stone’, ‘nephrolithiasis’, ‘urolithiasis’, ‘calculus’, ‘spinal cord injury’ or ‘paraplegia’ with ‘SWL’, ‘ureteroscopy’, ‘chemolysis’ and ‘PCNL.’ The Cochrane database, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence guidelines and the Scottish Intercollegiate guidelines were searched using the terms ‘spinal cord injury’ and ‘urolithiasis’ and ‘nephrolithiasis’.
Results:
A total of 32 papers were identified, mainly case series or case–cohort studies with few contemporary papers. The risk of developing a renal stone after spinal cord injury (SCI) is between 7 and 20% over a period of 8–10 years. Stone formation may be related to early demineralisation of bone or chronic infection. Biochemical abnormalities are not significantly different between stone-forming and non-stone forming patients, though these patients differ from healthy controls. Presentation may be atypical, but is most commonly recurrent urinary tract infection. Treatment may be complicated by lower limb contractures limiting retrograde access. Several case series report success with shock wave lithotripsy varying from 50 to 70%, though comparisons are limited by heterogeneous indications and reporting. Percutaneous nephrolithotomy remains the gold standard for stones measuring 2 cm and above. Stone-free rates of 90% have been reported, though surgery was often complex with higher complication rates.
Conclusion:
Management of upper urinary tract stones in patients with SCI is complex regarding surgical technique, post-operative care and recurrence rates. Further contemporary case series must use standardised reporting tools to allow valid comparisons.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
Chen Y, DeVivo MJ, Stover SL, Lloyd LK . Recurrent kidney stone: a 25-year follow-up study in persons with spinal cord injury. Urology 2002; 60: 228–232. (Level 3b).
Smith N, Hegarty N, Glass J . Novel system for grading complexity of PCNL procedures: the Guy's Stone Score. Abstract 824 EAU Annual Meeting, Stockholm 2009.
Chen Y, DeVivo MJ, Roseman JM . Current trend and risk factors for kidney stones in persons with spinal cord injury: a longitudinal study. Spinal Cord 2000; 38: 346–353. (Level 2b).
DeVivo MJ, Fine PR, Cutter GR, Maetz HM . The risk of renal calculi in spinal cord injury patients. J Urol 1984; 131: 857–860. (Level 2b).
Hansen RB, Biering-Sørensen F, Kristensen JK . Urinary calculi following traumatic spinal cord injury. Scand J Urol Nephrol 2007; 41: 115–119. (Level 3b).
Naftchi NE, Viau AT, Sell GH, Lowman EW . Mineral metabolism in spinal cord injury. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1980; 61: 139–142. (Level 3b).
DeVivo MJ, Fine PR . Predicting renal calculus occurrence in spinal cord injury patients. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1986; 67: 722–725. (Level 3b).
Chen Y, Roseman JM, Devivo MJ, Funkhouser E . Does fluid amount and choice influence urinary stone formation in persons with spinal cord injury? Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2002; 83: 1002–1008. (Level 3b).
Hall MK, Hackler RH, Zampieri TA, Zampieri JB . Renal calculi in spinal cord-injured patient: association with reflux, bladder stones, and foley catheter drainage. Urology 1989; 34: 126–128. (Level 3b).
Donnellan SM, Bolton DM . The impact of contemporary bladder management techniques on struvite calculi associated with spinal cord injury. BJU Int 1999; 84: 280–285. (Level 3b).
Sugimura T, Arnold E, English S, Moore J . Chronic suprapubic catheterization in the management of patients with spinal cord injuries: analysis of upper and lower tract complications. BJU Int 2008; 101: 1396–1400. (Level 3b).
Burr RG, Nuseibeh I . Biochemical studies in paraplegic renal stone patients. 1. Plasma biochemistry and urinary calcium and saturation. Br J Urol 1985; 57: 269–274. (Level 3b).
Burr RG, Nuseibeh I, Abiaka CD . Biochemical studies in paraplegic renal stone patients. 2. Urinary excretion of citrate, inorganic pyrophosphate, silicate and urate. Br J Urol 1985; 57: 275–278. (Level 3b).
Burr RG . Urinary calculi composition in patients with spinal cord lesions. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1978; 59: 84–88. (Level 4).
Vaidyanathan S, Singh G, Soni BM, Hughes P, Watt JW, Dundas S et al. Silent hydronephrosis/pyonephrosis due to upper urinary tract calculi in spinal cord injury patients. Spinal Cord 2000; 38: 661–668. (Level 4).
Abrams P, Agarwal M, Drake M, El-Masri W, Fulford S, Reid S et al. A proposed guideline for the urological management of patients with spinal cord injury. BJU Int 2008; 101: 989–994. (Grade D).
Ost MC, Lee BR . Urolithiasis in patients with spinal cord injuries: risk factors, management, and outcomes. Curr Opin Urol 2006; 16: 93–99. (Level 3a).
Lazare JN, Saltzman B, Sotolongo J . Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy treatment of spinal cord injury patients. J Urol 1988; 140: 266–269. (Level 4).
Spirnak JP, Bodner D, Udayashankar S, Resnick MI . Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy in traumatic quadriplegic patients: can it be safely performed without anesthesia? J Urol 1988; 139: 18–19. (Level 4).
Niedrach WL, Davis RS, Tonetti FW, Cockett AT . Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy in patients with spinal cord dysfunction. Urology 1991; 38: 152–156. (Level 4).
Sugiyama T, Fugelso P, Avon M . Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy in neurologically impaired patients. Semin Urol 1992; 10: 109–111. (Level 4).
Deliveliotis C, Picramenos D, Kostakopoulos A, Stavropoulos NI, Alexopoulou K, Karagiotis E . Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy in paraplegic and quadriplegic patients. Int Urol Nephrol 1994; 26: 151–154. (Level 4).
Robert M, Bennani A, Ohanna F, Guiter J, Avérous M, Grasset D . The management of upper urinary tract calculi by piezoelectric extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy in spinal cord injury patients. Paraplegia 1995; 33: 132–135. (Level 4).
Vaidyanathan S, Hirst R, Parsons KF, Singh G, Soni BM, Oo T et al. Bilateral extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy in a spinal cord injury patient with a cardiac pacemaker. Spinal Cord 2001; 39: 286–289. (Level 4).
Vaidyanathan S, Johnson H, Singh G, Hughes P, Soni BM, Parsons KF et al. Extra corporeal shock wave lithotripsy of calculi located in lower calyx of left kidney in a spinal cord injury patient who has implantation of baclofen pump in the ipsilateral loin. Spinal Cord 2002; 40: 94–95. (Level 4).
Culkin DJ, Wheeler Jr JS, Nemchausky BA, Fruin RC, Canning JR . Percutaneous nephrolithotomy in the spinal cord injury population. J Urol 1986; 136: 1181–1183. (Level 4).
Culkin DJ, Wheeler JS, Nemchausky BA, Fruin RC, Canning JR . Percutaneous nephrolithotomy: spinal cord injury vs. ambulatory patients. J Am Paraplegia Soc 1990; 13: 4–6. (Level 3b).
Rubenstein JN, Gonzalez CM, Blunt LW, Clemens JQ, Nadler RB . Safety and efficacy of percutaneous nephrolithotomy in patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction. Urology 2004; 63: 636–640. (Level 4).
Lawrentschuk N, Pan D, Grills R, Rogerson J, Angus D, Webb DR et al. Outcome from percutaneous nephrolithotomy in patients with spinal cord injury, using a single-stage dilator for access. BJU Int 2005; 96: 379–384. (Level 4).
Symons S, Biyani CS, Bhargava S, Irvine HC, Ellingham J, Cartledge J et al. Challenge of percutaneous nephrolithotomy in patients with spinal neuropathy. Int J Urol 2006; 13: 874–879. (Level 4).
Draga RO, Kok ET, Sorel MR, Bosch RJ, Lock TM . Percutaneous nephrolithotomy: factors associated with fever after the first postoperative day and systemic inflammatory response syndrome. J Endourol 2009; 23: 921–927. (Level 3b).
Levy DA, Resnick MI . Management of urinary stones in the patient with spinal cord injury. Urol Clin N Am 1993; 20: 435–442. (Level 3a).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Ramsey, S., McIlhenny, C. Evidence-based management of upper tract urolithiasis in the spinal cord-injured patient. Spinal Cord 49, 948–954 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.2011.50
Received:
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.2011.50
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
A systematic review of postoperative outcomes of kidney stone surgery and meta-analysis of outcomes of percutaneous nephrolithotomy in individuals with spinal cord injury
Spinal Cord (2023)
-
Incidence and safety outcomes associated with active stone removal procedures (ASRP): a comparison between neurological and non-neurological patients using the French National Health Data Base
World Journal of Urology (2022)
-
Emerging Concepts in Transitional Care of Congenital Genitourinary Reconstructions
Current Bladder Dysfunction Reports (2015)
-
Literature Review: Long-Term Complications of the Neurogenic Bladder
Current Bladder Dysfunction Reports (2015)
-
Surgical Management of Urolithiasis in Spinal Cord Injury Patients
Current Urology Reports (2014)


