## Correct Answer: B. Cysto urethroscope The cysto-urethroscope is the instrument of choice for inserting a ureteric catheter (JJ stent) into the ureter via an **antegrade or retrograde approach**. This rigid or semi-rigid endoscope allows direct visualization of the ureteric orifice in the bladder, enabling the surgeon to selectively catheterize the ureter under direct vision. The instrument combines cystoscopic (bladder visualization) and urethroscopic (urethral visualization) capabilities, making it essential for retrograde ureteric catheterization—the most common approach in Indian urology practice for JJ stent placement, ureteric stricture management, and stone extraction. The working channel accommodates guidewires, catheters, and instruments. In contrast to flexible ureteroscopes (which are diagnostic/therapeutic but lack the rigid platform needed for stent insertion in many cases), the cysto-urethroscope provides the stability, visualization, and instrumentation channel required for safe tube placement. This is the standard DOC in Indian urology departments for retrograde ureteric access. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Ureteroscope** — While a **flexible ureteroscope** can be used for diagnostic and therapeutic procedures within the ureter itself (stone extraction, stricture dilation), it is NOT the primary instrument for inserting a ureteric catheter/JJ stent. Ureteroscopes lack the rigid platform and adequate working channel that the cysto-urethroscope provides. The ureteroscope is used *after* the ureter has been accessed via cysto-urethroscope; it does not perform the initial catheterization. **C. Nephroscope** — A **nephroscope** is used for **percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL)** and antegrade access to the collecting system via a percutaneous renal puncture. It is not used for retrograde ureteric catheterization, which is the standard approach for JJ stent insertion in most Indian centers. Nephroscopy is reserved for large stones, staghorn calculi, and when retrograde access fails—not for routine tube insertion. **D. Endoscope** — **'Endoscope'** is a generic term encompassing all tubular visualization instruments (cystoscope, ureteroscope, nephroscope, bronchoscope, etc.). It is too non-specific to be the correct answer in a urology context. The question requires the specific instrument—cysto-urethroscope—which is a type of endoscope but the only one capable of selective ureteric catheterization via the bladder. ## High-Yield Facts - **Cysto-urethroscope** is the standard instrument for **retrograde ureteric catheterization** and JJ stent insertion in Indian urology practice. - **Retrograde approach** (via cysto-urethroscope) is preferred over antegrade (nephroscope) for routine ureteric stenting due to lower morbidity and ease of access. - The cysto-urethroscope provides **direct visualization of the ureteric orifice** in the bladder, enabling selective catheterization under vision. - **Flexible ureteroscopes** are diagnostic/therapeutic tools for intraureteric pathology but cannot replace the cysto-urethroscope for initial ureteric access and stent insertion. - **PCNL (percutaneous nephrolithotomy)** uses a nephroscope, not a cysto-urethroscope, for antegrade renal access. ## Mnemonics **CUE for Catheter** **C**ysto-**U**rethroscope for **E**ntry into ureter. Use this when the question asks about inserting tubes (catheters, stents) into the ureter via the bladder. **URETERIC ACCESS: Retrograde vs Antegrade** **Retrograde** (cysto-urethroscope) = routine, preferred, lower morbidity. **Antegrade** (nephroscope) = failed retrograde, large stones, PCNL. Remember: 'Retro first, Ante when retro fails.' ## NBE Trap NBE may pair 'ureteroscope' with ureteric procedures to trap students who conflate diagnostic/therapeutic ureteroscopy with the instrument needed for *initial* ureteric catheterization. The cysto-urethroscope is the gateway; the ureteroscope is the tool used *after* access is gained. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian government hospitals and private centers, the cysto-urethroscope is the workhorse for JJ stent insertion in obstructive uropathy, ureteric strictures, and post-ESWL management. Mastery of retrograde ureteric catheterization via cysto-urethroscope is essential for any urology resident—it is performed dozens of times daily in busy urology OTs across India. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 70 (Urology); OP Ghai Ch. 12 (Endourology)_
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