Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 3 , Pages 304-307, September 1995

Emergency Intravenous Pyelography in the Setting of Possible Renal Colic: Is It Indicated?☆☆

Received 24 October 1994; received in revised form 23 January 1995; accepted 1 February 1995.

Abstract 

Study objective: To determine whether emergency IV pyelography (IVP) adds significant information to clinical judgment in the setting of possible renal colic. Design: A prospective voluntary survey of a convenience sample of physicians at the time of patient encounter. Setting: The emergency department of a university hospital, annual census 50,000 visits. Participants: Emergency medicine faculty physicians. Intervention: Physicians were surveyed before and after IVP was performed on patients with possible renal colic. Results: Over the course of 12 months, 62 patients with possible kidney stones were evaluated by 14 different faculty ED physicians, who filled out surveys. Before IVP results were obtained, 63% of patients were thought to have a high (more than 75%) probability of ureteral obstruction. In 59% of these patients, the IVP results showed ureteral obstruction. The IVP revealed unexpected findings in 42% of all patients, including normal results in 19%, ureteral stones in 5%, higher than expected grade of obstruction in 6%, and lower than expected grade of obstruction in 5%. Management was reported to have been changed in 60% of all patients for a wide variety of reasons, but consideration of alternative diagnosis was the most common reason, occurring in 23%. Management changes included unexpected hospital admission in five patients (9%) and emergency urologic consultation in five patients (9%). Conclusion: Emergency IVPs are useful in the evaluation of patients with suspected renal colic, primarily when they rule out ureteral obstruction and allow consideration of alternative diagnoses. Not uncommonly, emergency urologic consultation or hospitalization occurs on the basis of IVP findings. [Wrenn K: Emergency intravenous pyelography in the setting of possible renal colic: Is it indicated? Ann Emerg Med September 1995;26:304-307.]

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 From the Department of Emergency Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.

☆☆ Address for reprints: Keith Wrenn, MD, 703 Oxford House, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-4700, 615-936-1157, Fax 615-936-1316

 Reprint no. 47/1/66637

PII: S0196-0644(95)70077-3

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 3 , Pages 304-307, September 1995