The most common types of uroliths larger than 1 mm are readily visible and accurately measured in an in vitro setting mimicking the canine abdomen using digital radiography

Patricia DeBow, Mylène Auger, Constance Fazio, Kelsey Cline, Xiaojuan Zhu, Jody Lulich, Marie de Swarte, Donald Lamb, Adrien Maxence Hespel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Abdominal radiography is an important diagnostic to detect uroliths. Cystine and urate uroliths were historically characterized as nonmineral opaque on survey radiographs. However, recent research and clinical observations indicate that pure urate and cystine uroliths may be detected with digital radiography. The primary purpose of this prospective, in vitro, diagnostic accuracy study was to determine the sensitivity of digital radiography in detecting cystoliths of varying size and composition. Forty canine uroliths of pure composition (10 each of calcium oxalate, struvite, cystine, and urate), acquired from Minnesota Urolith Center and ranging from 1 to 10 mm, were placed in phantoms of three various sizes and radiographed. The radiographs, including three sets of each urolith separately, were evaluated by three blinded radiologists on two separate occasions. Evaluation included presence or absence of urolith, number of uroliths, and maximum diameter of the urolith(s). For all four types of uroliths and all readers, the specificity and PPV were 100% with an associated very high sensitivity (94.4%–98.9%) and NPV (94.8%–98.9%). Calcium oxalate uroliths were the most accurately measured and struvite were the least accurately measured when compared with the gross measurement. Smaller uroliths were more accurately measured than larger uroliths. Uroliths placed in smaller bladder phantoms were more accurately measured than in larger bladder phantoms. Though accurate measurement of uroliths is complicated by and dependent on numerous variables, our results reveal that urate and cystine uroliths are visualized on digital radiography making them a relevant differential diagnosis when seen clinically.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)806-812
Number of pages7
JournalVeterinary Radiology and Ultrasound
Volume64
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American College of Veterinary Radiology.

Keywords

  • calcium oxalate
  • cystine
  • struvite
  • urate

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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