| Literature DB >> 27579444 |
Jun H Song1, Joshua R Kaplan2, Daniel Abbott2, Eric Gewirtz3, Ellen Hauck3, Daniel D Eun2.
Abstract
Obturator nerve injury is a known injury after robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (RALP) and patients often present with motor and sensory deficits in the immediate postoperative period. We describe a 65-year-old male who presented with motor deficits, indicative of obturator neurapraxia after RALP upon waking from anesthesia. Work-up revealed an expansile hematoma possibly compressing the obturator nerve. After evacuation of the hematoma, the patient had immediate improvement of his neurologic deficits. Our patient's clinical vignette illustrates the importance of considering postsurgical hematoma in the differential diagnosis when patients present with signs and symptoms of obturator neurapraxia after RALP.Entities:
Keywords: RALP; prostate cancer; robotics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27579444 PMCID: PMC4999023 DOI: 10.1089/cren.2016.0075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endourol Case Rep ISSN: 2379-9889

Postoperative CT scans. (A) Coronal section. (B) Axial section. Red arrows indicate expansile hematoma in the left paracolic gutter.