Back to Search
Start Over
Characterization of Urinary Calculi: In Vitro Study of 'Twinkling Artifact' Revealed by Color-Flow Sonography
- Source :
- Journal of Urology. 161:1399-1400
- Publication Year :
- 1999
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 1999.
-
Abstract
- The "twinkling artifact" is a color-flow sonographic artifact described behind calcifications and presenting as a random color encoding in the region where shadowing would be expected on gray-scale images. Our purpose was to study the relationship between this twinkling artifact seen behind urinary stones on color-flow sonography and the morphology or biochemical composition of these urinary stones.Forty-seven urinary stones were studied in vitro with color-flow sonography. Transmit frequency, color gain, velocity range, color filters, focal depth, and depth of field were changed during scanning. The twinkling artifact was graded 0 when absent, 1 when present but occupying a portion of acoustic shadowing, and 2 when occupying the entire acoustic shadowing. Stones were studied under a binocular magnifying glass to characterize the surface, and infrared spectrophotometry was used to determine the chemical composition.Calculi of calcium oxalate dihydrate and calcium phosphate always produced a grade 1 or grade 2 twinkling artifact. Absence of artifact was noted only for calcium oxalate monohydrate and urate stones. In 100% of grade 0 calcium oxalate stones, the monohydrate compound was predominant (93%). In 100% of grade 2 calcium oxalate stones, the dihydrate compound was predominant (75%). For calcium oxalate stones, the surface pattern was correlated with their composition. Sensitivity and specificity for absence of artifact, as indicative of calcium oxalate monohydrate, were 60% and 83%, respectively, for all stones and 56% and 100%, respectively, only for radiopaque stones.An in vitro relationship exists between the twinkling artifact and the morphology of urinary stones. Color-flow sonography could play a role in detecting dense calcium oxalate monohydrate calculi, which in turn may help predict fragmentability.
- Subjects :
- Artifact (error)
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
Spectrophotometry, Infrared
genetic structures
Color image
business.industry
Urology
General Medicine
In Vitro Techniques
Acoustic shadow
Nuclear magnetic resonance
Infrared Spectrophotometry
medicine
Biochemical composition
Humans
In vitro study
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Urinary Calculi
Color filter array
Color flow
Ultrasonography, Doppler, Color
Artifacts
business
Twinkling
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15273792 and 00225347
- Volume :
- 161
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Urology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....230ded578de1eaca80e0eee8e04e2dfa