Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire

Urolithiasis ranks as the third most prevalent condition in urology, with statistical evidence indicating a lifetime risk of 13% in males and 7% in females, alongside a recurrence rate of 50% within a decade. The surgical care of urolithiasis is intricate, with various competing therapeutic techniqu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: John, Jeff
Other Authors: Kaestner, Lisa-Ann
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613153909538816
access_status_str Open Access
author John, Jeff
author2 Kaestner, Lisa-Ann
author_browse John, Jeff
Kaestner, Lisa-Ann
author_facet Kaestner, Lisa-Ann
John, Jeff
author_sort John, Jeff
collection Thesis
description Urolithiasis ranks as the third most prevalent condition in urology, with statistical evidence indicating a lifetime risk of 13% in males and 7% in females, alongside a recurrence rate of 50% within a decade. The surgical care of urolithiasis is intricate, with various competing therapeutic techniques available, including retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS). Over the years, leading urological associations have progressively broadened the criteria for RIRS in the surgical treatment of urolithiasis. While it offers enhanced stone-free rates relative to shockwave lithotripsy and reduced patient morbidity compared to percutaneous nephrolithotomy, it is not devoid of problems, many of which are associated with intrarenal pressure (IRP). To alleviate the challenges associated with increased IRP, surgeons may utilize diverse approaches to regulate IRP. Pharmacologic therapies in the perioperative period to mitigate IRP have been documented, although none of these strategies have been integrated into clinical practice. This thesis aims to report on the design, safety, and efficacy of an innovative isoprenaline-eluting guidewire (IsoWire), a platform guidewire intended for the administration of topical isoprenaline, a beta-receptor agonist, to the genitourinary system. This is the first study to report the delivery of isoprenaline using a drug-eluting guidewire. This dissertation comprises six chapters. The initial five chapters each have an overview, abstract, introduction, methodology, results, discussion, and conclusion sections. Chapter 1 is a narrative literature review addressing the problems associated with high IRP and outlines techniques to mitigate elevated IRP in RIRS to promote safer endourological practices. To prepare for our investigation on the porcine model, we required a simulation model to precisely outline the procedural procedures. Commercially available models are expensive and not readily accessible. Chapter 2 delineates the design and fabrication of the Frere Intrarenal Surgery Trainer (FiST) bench-top model. This chapter further elucidates its validation through the involvement of individuals with prior competence in the RIRS technique. This high-fidelity, cost-effective, portable, durable, and reusable training model is, to our knowledge, the inaugural published 3D model that integrates all components of RIRS, allowing us to meticulously optimise the procedural stages for our research. The porcine model has frequently been utilized by researchers and urological surgeons for medical advancements. Despite the multiple advantages of this model, the specific anatomical knowledge that qualifies it as the optimal model in urology remains inadequately defined. In Chapter 3, we present the first reported study that precisely delineates pertinent endoscopic and CT-based urological anatomy of female Landrace pigs. The insights acquired from this research were essential for proceeding with the two studies described in Chapters 4 and 5. Furthermore, this unprecedented research will help other researchers use the porcine model to conduct research in endourology with confidence. Chapter 4 delineates the design of the IsoWire and examines the results of the preliminary in vitro release studies. Furthermore, we evaluated IsoWires of three distinct strengths, specifically wires that release 5 μg, 7.5 μg, and 10 μg in the first minute minute, respectively. Our investigation demonstrated that the IsoWire, which released 7.5 μg of isoprenaline within the initial minute, is safe, showing no alterations in mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), or other irregular electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities. Moreover, the in vitro release assays demonstrated that the IsoWire released all isoprenaline exponentially within the initial 4 minutes. Chapter 5 delineates the impact of the IsoWire, which dispenses 7.5 μg of isoprenaline within the initial minute, on IRP, the duration of this effect, and its safety in a porcine model. Chapter 6 presents a conclusion and reflection on this thesis, emphasising its original contributions to the field of urology and addressing prospective avenues for future research.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42356
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:35.974Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Division of General Surgery
publisherStr Division of General Surgery
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42356 Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire John, Jeff Kaestner, Lisa-Ann Lazarus, John Fieggen, Graham Surgery Urolithiasis ranks as the third most prevalent condition in urology, with statistical evidence indicating a lifetime risk of 13% in males and 7% in females, alongside a recurrence rate of 50% within a decade. The surgical care of urolithiasis is intricate, with various competing therapeutic techniques available, including retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS). Over the years, leading urological associations have progressively broadened the criteria for RIRS in the surgical treatment of urolithiasis. While it offers enhanced stone-free rates relative to shockwave lithotripsy and reduced patient morbidity compared to percutaneous nephrolithotomy, it is not devoid of problems, many of which are associated with intrarenal pressure (IRP). To alleviate the challenges associated with increased IRP, surgeons may utilize diverse approaches to regulate IRP. Pharmacologic therapies in the perioperative period to mitigate IRP have been documented, although none of these strategies have been integrated into clinical practice. This thesis aims to report on the design, safety, and efficacy of an innovative isoprenaline-eluting guidewire (IsoWire), a platform guidewire intended for the administration of topical isoprenaline, a beta-receptor agonist, to the genitourinary system. This is the first study to report the delivery of isoprenaline using a drug-eluting guidewire. This dissertation comprises six chapters. The initial five chapters each have an overview, abstract, introduction, methodology, results, discussion, and conclusion sections. Chapter 1 is a narrative literature review addressing the problems associated with high IRP and outlines techniques to mitigate elevated IRP in RIRS to promote safer endourological practices. To prepare for our investigation on the porcine model, we required a simulation model to precisely outline the procedural procedures. Commercially available models are expensive and not readily accessible. Chapter 2 delineates the design and fabrication of the Frere Intrarenal Surgery Trainer (FiST) bench-top model. This chapter further elucidates its validation through the involvement of individuals with prior competence in the RIRS technique. This high-fidelity, cost-effective, portable, durable, and reusable training model is, to our knowledge, the inaugural published 3D model that integrates all components of RIRS, allowing us to meticulously optimise the procedural stages for our research. The porcine model has frequently been utilized by researchers and urological surgeons for medical advancements. Despite the multiple advantages of this model, the specific anatomical knowledge that qualifies it as the optimal model in urology remains inadequately defined. In Chapter 3, we present the first reported study that precisely delineates pertinent endoscopic and CT-based urological anatomy of female Landrace pigs. The insights acquired from this research were essential for proceeding with the two studies described in Chapters 4 and 5. Furthermore, this unprecedented research will help other researchers use the porcine model to conduct research in endourology with confidence. Chapter 4 delineates the design of the IsoWire and examines the results of the preliminary in vitro release studies. Furthermore, we evaluated IsoWires of three distinct strengths, specifically wires that release 5 μg, 7.5 μg, and 10 μg in the first minute minute, respectively. Our investigation demonstrated that the IsoWire, which released 7.5 μg of isoprenaline within the initial minute, is safe, showing no alterations in mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), or other irregular electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities. Moreover, the in vitro release assays demonstrated that the IsoWire released all isoprenaline exponentially within the initial 4 minutes. Chapter 5 delineates the impact of the IsoWire, which dispenses 7.5 μg of isoprenaline within the initial minute, on IRP, the duration of this effect, and its safety in a porcine model. Chapter 6 presents a conclusion and reflection on this thesis, emphasising its original contributions to the field of urology and addressing prospective avenues for future research. 2025-11-26T12:56:58Z 2025-11-26T12:56:58Z 2025 2025-11-26T12:54:50Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42356 en eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Surgery
John, Jeff
Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
title_full Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
title_fullStr Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
title_full_unstemmed Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
title_short Mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
title_sort mitigation of intrarenal pressure in retrograde intrarenal surgery with a novel isoprenaline eluting guidewire
topic Surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42356
work_keys_str_mv AT johnjeff mitigationofintrarenalpressureinretrogradeintrarenalsurgerywithanovelisoprenalineelutingguidewire