A 40-year-old female presented with a bacterial skin infection and was treated with antibiotics and corticosteroids. While being examined in the department, the patient underwent bone scintigraphy to evaluate excruciating acute right hip pain. On three-phase bone scintigraphy, blood pool images demonstrated a prominent abnormal focal area of increased soft-tissue uptake in the right hip joint/groin region. T
Case summary:
A 76-year-old man with prostatic enlargement presented with a
single episode of painless gross hematuria. He had been seen
regularly for several years in urology for minimally obstructive
voiding dynamics. His medications included furosemide. He was
scheduled for an intravenous urogram (IVU).
Diagnosis:
Multiple bladder stones composed of half uric acid and half
ammonium acid urate secondary to urinary stasis from benign
prostatic hypertrophy.
The abdominal radiograph (figure 1) showed multiple
sub-centimeter spherical opacities in the pelvis in the region of
the bladder, without focal discrete calcifications. The IVU (figure
2) revealed multiple spherical and nodular filling defects in the
bladder ranging from 5 to 10 mm in size. These defects moved
slightly with positioning and with bladder filling. Whether these
nodules floated or sank in the contrast could not be determined
from supine or upright plain radiographs. Mild bladder wall
thickening was present and later verified on CT scan.
The mobile, intraluminal, and dependent nature of the filling
defects was determined by supine (figure 3) and prone (figure 4) CT
scans of the pelvis. CT further verified absence of dense
calcification and the lack of bladder wall mass.
Attempted stone evacuation via rigid cystoscopy was unsuccessful
due to the tremendous stone burden and the enlarged prostate. The
patient subsequently underwent open prostatectomy and the bladder
stones were removed (figure 5).
Discussion:
Uric acid stones represent 5 to 10% of urinary stones in the US.
If pure, they are classically radiolucent and small. More than half
are mixed with calcium salts, which make them appear both larger
and more radiopaque. Risk factors for uric acid stone formation
include hyperuricosuria, myeloproliferative disorders, gout, and
causes of concentrated or acidic urine.1 Up to one-half of patients
with uric acid stones will have gout. Uric acid stones are more
common in males and are usually familial, whether or not gout is
present. Uric acid stones are formed when concentrated acidic urine
becomes supersaturated with undissociated uric acid, which forms
crystals and stones that are colored red-orange in urine and are
strongly birefringent. Rarely, uric acid crystals can plug the
collecting tubules, causing acute renal failure or chronic renal
insufficiency.2
Seventy percent of bladder stones are associated with
obstruction, stasis, or poor emptying. Thirty percent have
associated gram-negative urinary tract infections.3 Less common
causes include bladder diverticula, foreign body, urinary stent,
chronic catheterization, or a migrant stone from the upper
tract.1-3 No definite correlation between specific stone type and
the cause of bladder obstruction has been identified.4 Bladder
stone diagnosis may be difficult to make on plain radiography due
to overlying rectosigmoid feces, poor bladder opacification with
contrast, or similarity to phleboliths.1
Bladder stones have become increasingly less common in the
western hemisphere in the last century, most likely due to dietary
and nutritional improvements. The incidence in other parts of the
world remains higher, however. In India, 13 people in 100,000 may
be affected. A recent review of 300 bladder stones found 50% were
made up of mostly magnesium ammonium phosphate, 31% of calcium
salts, and 5% of uric acid origin.6 Although bladder stones usually
are solitary, multiple stones have been found in up to 25% of
patients.1
Patients with bladder stones may present with hematuria,
recurrent UTIs, pelvic pain, irritative or obstructive voiding
symptoms, or with no symptoms at all. Treatment options include
surgical extraction, lithotripsy, or alkalinization of urine,
although the latter has demonstrated poor results.8
Diagnosis of bladder calculi is made with a CT scan or cystogram
from an intravenous urogram or a retrograde study. The differential
diagnosis for the nodular filling defects in this case includes
blood clots, fungus balls, papillary tumor, eosinophilic cystitis,
cystitis cystica, and cystitis glandularis. Nonopaque or partly
opaque stones can be differentiated from tumor by showing mobility
on a plain radiograph, ultrasound, or CT scan.
Uric acid stones will show up as a bright, well defined area of
medium-high attenuation, with CT numbers of greater than 150 HU,
although usually of less than stones with a more calcific
component.9 CT scans may also address the questions of prostate
size and bladder wall thickening versus mass. CT has recently
proven to be a useful tool in the evaluation of ureteral stones in
the setting of acute flank pain.10 It also may assist in the
diagnosis and characterization of bladder stones.
References
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Prepared by Bradford J. Wood, MD, Peter R. Mueller, MD,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; Robert M. Mordkin, MD,
and Terrence Regan, MD, Georgetown University Medical Center,
Washington DC.