Literature DB >> 14501728

Urethral reconstruction in spinal cord injury patients.

Charles L Secrest1, Shahar Madjar, Anoop K Sharma, Courtney Covington-Nichols.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Bladder management programs for patients with spinal cord injury and neurological disease (SCIND) include intermittent catheterization and sphincterotomy with external catheter drainage. These programs depend on maintaining a patent urethra. Once urethral stricture, erosion, diverticulum or urethrocutaneous fistula occurs, the only treatments available are urethral reconstruction and urinary diversion. We evaluate the role of urethral reconstruction in this subset of patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The charts of 18 patients with SCIND (spinal cord injury 16, cerebral palsy 1, meningomyelocele 1) were retrospectively analyzed. Different surgical procedures had been performed according to the presenting pathology and tissue availability.
RESULTS: Urethral reconstruction was performed in 17 patients with a mean age of 42.2 years (range 27 to 60). Of the patients 13 are paraplegic and 4 are quadriplegic. Urethral defects included urethral stricture in 6 cases, urethral erosion in 4, urethrocutaneous fistula in 3, urethral diverticula in 1 and combined defects in 3. Mean followup is 3.7 years (range 1 to 13) and the mean number of reoperations was 1.4 (range 0 to 4). Of the 17 patients 11 (64.7%) who underwent urethral reconstruction eventually required urinary diversion for end stage urethral pathology (incontinent ileovesicostomy 5, right colon pouches 2, other procedures 4). The mean time from first urethral reconstruction to eventual urinary diversion was 3.3 years (range 0.7 to 7). Four patients maintain a patent urethra while 1 patient was lost to followup.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with SCIND in whom urethral reconstruction is considered should be advised that urethral surgery carries a high risk of reoperation and eventual need for urinary diversion. Clearly, many patients with neurological disease and severe urethral pathology are best treated with urinary diversion.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 14501728     DOI: 10.1097/01.ju.0000087614.19425.df

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urol        ISSN: 0022-5347            Impact factor:   7.450


  5 in total

Review 1.  A systematic review of the management of autonomic dysreflexia after spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Andrei Krassioukov; Darren E Warburton; Robert Teasell; Janice J Eng
Journal:  Arch Phys Med Rehabil       Date:  2009-04       Impact factor: 3.966

Review 2.  Management of the Transitional Urology Patient: the Role of the Adult Reconstructive Urologist.

Authors:  Kyle A Scarberry; Ronak A Gor; Robert C Kovell
Journal:  Curr Urol Rep       Date:  2021-02-03       Impact factor: 3.092

3.  Severe ventral erosion of penis caused by indwelling urethral catheter and inflation of Foley balloon in urethra-need to create list of "never events in spinal cord injury" in order to prevent these complications from happening in paraplegic and tetraplegic patients.

Authors:  Subramanian Vaidyanathan; Bakul M Soni; Peter L Hughes; Gurpreet Singh; Tun Oo
Journal:  Adv Urol       Date:  2010-06-27

4.  Ileovesicostomy update: changes for the 21st century.

Authors:  W Britt Zimmerman; Richard A Santucci
Journal:  Adv Urol       Date:  2009-10-27

5.  Multicenter urethroplasty outcomes for urethral stricture disease for patients with neurogenic bladder or bladder dysfunction requiring clean intermittent catheterization.

Authors:  Andrew J Cohen; Philip J Cheng; Sikai Song; German Patino; Jeremy B Myers; Samit S Roy; Sean P Elliott; Joseph Pariser; Justin Drobish; Brad A Erickson; Thomas W Fuller; Jill C Buckley; Alex J Vanni; Nima Baradaran; Benjamin N Breyer
Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2021-05
  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.