We created a computer model for evaluating the effect of dysfunctional voiding on the costs of managing vesicoureteral reflux in children.The literature on vesicoureteral reflux was reviewed to create a set of assumptions regarding the epidemiology, likelihood of resolution, need for operative intervention, risk of infection and appropriate regimen for nonoperative surveillance. Recent literature describing the effect of dysfunctional voiding on the clinical course of vesicoureteral reflux was included in the model to compare the costs of treating vesicoureteral reflux in children with and without dysfunctional voiding. A 5-year management period was considered.Dysfunctional voiding in children with vesicoureteral reflux increased the cost of treatment per patient by 51.2%. The cost per patient increased with increasing grade in those with and without dysfunctional voiding. The difference in costs in the 2 groups increased from 18.7% for grade 1 reflux to 62.1% for grade 5. Sensitivity analysis was performed, in which the risk of urinary tract infection, rate of surgical resolution, incidence of dysfunctional voiding and discount rate varied. The cost in children with dysfunctional voiding remained higher in all scenarios studied, showing the robustness of the model.Dysfunctional voiding substantially increases the costs of treating children with vesicoureteral reflux due to the higher rate of urinary tract infection in children with dysfunctional voiding. Methods that would decrease the rate of urinary tract infection in children with dysfunctional voiding and vesicoureteral reflux would lead to a significant saving of health care dollars.
We studied the possibility that age, height, weight and body mass index could be used to predict the likelihood of successful ureteroscopic access to the upper urinary tract without previous stent placement in prepubertal children.We retrospectively reviewed all ureteroscopic procedures for upper tract calculi in prepubertal children from 2003 to 2007. We compared age, height, weight and body mass index in patients who underwent successful primary flexible ureteroscopic access and in those who required initial stent placement to perform ureteroscopy.Successful primary ureteroscopic access to the upper tract was achieved in 18 of 30 patients (60%). There was no difference in mean age (9.9 vs 9.5 years, p = 0.8), height (132 vs 128 cm, p = 0.6), weight (37 vs 36 kg, p = 0.86) or body mass index (19.3 vs 20.5 kg/m(2), p = 0.55) between patients with successful vs unsuccessful upper tract access. Locations that prevented access to the upper urinary tract were evenly distributed among the ureteral orifice, iliac vessels and ureteropelvic junction.Age, height, weight and body mass index could not predict the likelihood of successful ureteroscopic access to the upper tract. Placement of a ureteral stent for passive ureteral dilation is not necessary for successful ureteroscopic access to the renal pelvis in prepubertal children. An initial attempt at ureteroscopy, with placement of a ureteral stent if upper tract access is unsuccessful, decreases the number of procedures while maintaining a low complication rate.
The lethal feature of male newborns with severe bladder outlet obstruction and oligohydramnios is pulmonary hypoplasia. We report a fetal lamb model of bladder outlet obstruction created in the early second trimester, and morphometric analysis of the profound pulmonary hypoplasia that resulted. At 55 to 65 days of gestation 8 consecutive male fetuses underwent surgical clipping of the urethra and urachus near the abdominal wall. A sham operation was performed in 1 female fetus. The lambs were delivered by cesarean section 10 weeks later. The right lungs were immediately fixed at a distending pressure of 25 cm. water. The results of the morphometric studies were compared to control animals from our earlier study of normal fetal lamb lung development; slides for both studies were scored in a blind, randomized fashion by 1 of us (S. G. D.). Although mean body weights for the groups were similar, mean right lung volume in the operated lambs was 63.8 cM.3 compared to 158 cM.3 in the control animals and 137 cM.3 in the sham operated fetus (p less than 0.0005). Relative volume of respiratory tissue was 87 per cent in the operated animals, and 92 per cent in the controls and the sham operated fetus (p less than 0.0005). Microscopic morphometry revealed an increased relative volume of inter-alveolar tissue in the experimental animals (35 compared to 23 per cent in the normal lambs, p less than 0.05), with a corresponding decrease in relative airspace volume. Alveolar numerical density and alveolar surface density were not statistically different between the groups, although total alveolar number and surface area were substantially decreased in the operated lambs due to the reduced mean lung volume. Mean alveolar wall thickness was increased at 3.6 microM. in the operated group versus 2.1 microM. in the normal group (p less than 0.0005) and 2.8 microM. in the sham operated fetus. Thus, the lung in the lamb with severe bladder outlet obstruction is hypoplastic and immature.