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Effect of Carbon Dioxide on the Twinkling Artifact in Ultrasound Imaging of Kidney Stones: A Pilot Study

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Specialty Radiology
Date 2017 Feb 14
PMID 28190622
Citations 3
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Abstract

Bone demineralization, dehydration and stasis put astronauts at increased risk of forming kidney stones in space. The color-Doppler ultrasound "twinkling artifact," which highlights kidney stones with color, can make stones readily detectable with ultrasound; however, our previous results suggest twinkling is caused by microbubbles on the stone surface which could be affected by the elevated levels of carbon dioxide found on space vehicles. Four pigs were implanted with kidney stones and imaged with ultrasound while the anesthetic carrier gas oscillated between oxygen and air containing 0.8% carbon dioxide. On exposure of the pigs to 0.8% carbon dioxide, twinkling was significantly reduced after 9-25 min and recovered when the carrier gas returned to oxygen. These trends repeated when pigs were again exposed to 0.8% carbon dioxide followed by oxygen. The reduction of twinkling caused by exposure to elevated carbon dioxide may make kidney stone detection with twinkling difficult in current space vehicles.

Citing Articles

Evidence of Microbubbles on Kidney Stones in Humans.

Simon J, Holm J, Thiel J, Dunmire B, Cunitz B, Bailey M Ultrasound Med Biol. 2020; 46(7):1802-1807.

PMID: 32245546 PMC: 7293935. DOI: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2020.02.010.


An investigation into the clinical accuracy of twinkling artifacts in patients with urolithiasis smaller than 5 mm in comparison with computed tomography scanning.

Hanafi M, Fakhrizadeh A, Jaafaezadeh E J Family Med Prim Care. 2019; 8(2):401-406.

PMID: 30984645 PMC: 6436258. DOI: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_300_18.


DEVELOPING COMPLETE ULTRASONIC MANAGEMENT OF KIDNEY STONES FOR SPACEFLIGHT.

Simon J, Dunmire B, Bailey M, Sorensen M J Space Saf Eng. 2017; 3(2):50-57.

PMID: 29034360 PMC: 5640155. DOI: 10.1016/S2468-8967(16)30018-0.

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