| Literature DB >> 26813349 |
Omer A Raheem1, Jill C Buckley1.
Abstract
The development of urethral stricture (US) or bladder neck contracture is a relatively uncommon but well described condition observed primarily in men. Despite familiarity with US disease, management remains challenging for urologists. Risk factors for the development of USs or bladder neck contracture include primary treatment modality, tobacco smoking, coronary artery disease and poorly controlled diabetes mellitus. Numerous treatment options exist for this condition that vary in procedural complexity, including intermittent self catheterization (CIC), serial urethral dilation, endoscopic techniques and open reconstructive repairs. Repetitive procedures for this condition may carry increased failure rates and morbidities. For the treatment of refractory or recalcitrant bladder neck contracture, newer intralesional anti-proliferative, anti-scar agents have been used in combination with transurethral bladder neck incisions to augment outcome and long-term effect. The primary focus of this systematic review of the published literature is to streamline and summarize various and newer therapeutic modalities available to manage patients with US or bladder neck contracture.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder neck contractures (BNC); injectable agents; urethral strictures (US)
Year: 2014 PMID: 26813349 PMCID: PMC4708170 DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2223-4683.2014.05.01
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Various therapeutic modalities utilized for the management of refectory or recalcitrant urethral strictures (US) and/or bladder neck contractures (BNC)
| Least invasive | Modest invasiveness | Most invasiveness |
|---|---|---|
| Clean intermittent self-catheterization (CIC) ( | Endoscopic incision and/or dilation ( | Abdominal excision of bladder neck scar with re-anastomosis or incision of scar with grafting and/or flap reconstruction ( |
| Office based serial urethral dilation ( | Urethral stents ( | Perineal excision of bladder neck scar with end-to-end anastomosis or incision of scar with grafting and/or flap reconstruction ( |
| Urethrotomy with injection of steroids ( | Abdominoperineal scar excision and re-anastomosis ( | |
| Standard urethral reconstruction (primary anastomosis, graft and flap) ( |
Figure 1(A) Cold knife urethrotomy; (B) MMC injection (republished with permission from Journal of Urology) (33). MMC, Mitomycin-C.