Treatment for urinary kidney stones, a common health problem in countries with a tropical climate, has become more advanced in Vietnam, but surgery is often required because patients wait too long to visit the hospital.
Many patients do not have regular health check-ups and often come to the hospital when the stone has enlarged to 20 millimetres or more, which requires surgery.
A 61-year-old patient, for example, was recently brought to the hospital for severe pain in his left abdomen, which had caused difficulties in urinating. The pain had lasted for nearly a year. The doctor’s diagnosis was a kidney stone 28 millimetres in diameter.
Hot weather leads to more concentrated urine, which is one of the favorable conditions for developing kidney stones. Each week, an average of 30 patients with kidney stones receive surgery at his hospital. That stones were sometimes caused by a poor diet or relapse of infection in the urinary tract.
Doctors at health facilities from the grassroots to central levels in the country have the capacity to treat kidney stones, including standard Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy (PCNL) surgery, which was first performed in Vietnam in 1997.
The European Association of Urology’s treatment guidelines updated in 2014 recommend PCNL as the therapy of choice for large renal calculi the size of 20 millimetres or above for certain conditions. Compared to open surgery, PCNL helps reduce pain during and after surgery and the number of days at the hospital for treatment.
PCNL surgery was not easy because it could cause significant complications such as blood loss, post-operative pain and potential renal damage as large instruments are needed during surgery.
Patients with large kidney stones have also benefited from mini-PCNL since 2013. However, the therapy can cause complications including infection, which could lead to death, according to An. A doctor at 108 Hospital in Hanoi said that he and his colleagues attending the workshop were planning to use the mini-PCNL procedure at their hospital in the near future.
The 108 Hospital has performed standard PCNL on a total of 500 patients. On the bright side, with remarkable progress in recent years, the success rate of transplants is increasing, bringing a better life for patients.
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