| Literature DB >> 29780654 |
Neel H Patel1, Ariel Schulman2, Jonathan Bloom3, Nikil Uppaluri1, Michael Iorga1, Suraj Parikh1, John Phillips1, Muhammad Choudhury1.
Abstract
Penile and scrotal entrapment from a metal ring placed at the base of the penis is a rare, but important clinical dilemma encountered in urology. Emergent presentation to the urologist, after ring placement far longer than safely practiced, risks ischemic and permanent injury to penile, scrotal, and intrascrotal structures. Treating urologists should be aware of the prevalence of metal ring use, their potential complications, and the surgical approach to their safe removal. We present two patients who were identified at our institution with strangulating injuries of retained penile rings. The first patient was a healthy, 43-year-old male with a metal ring retained for 24 hours that was safely removed with industrial bolt cutters. The second patient, a 74-year-old male, died as a result of sepsis from injuries secondary to penoscrotal ischemia after >48 hour ring retention despite prompt removal at emergent presentation. Although rare, sexual practices may include the use of penoscrotal rings. When retained, ischemic injury and edema may lead to strangulation. Emergent removal may require industrial equipment that is not within the confines of normal operating room tools. Tissue injury may be severe and sepsis life-threatening, even after ring removal.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29780654 PMCID: PMC5892274 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5216826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1Case 1: metal ring encircling phallus and scrotum.
Figure 2Industrial grade steel bolt cutters.
Figure 3(a) Case 2: metal ring encircling phallus and scrotum. (b) Areas of significant necrosis seen along scrotum. (c) Metal ring disassembled with bolt cutters.
Penile strangulation classification system by Bhat et al.
| Grade I | Distal penis edema. No evidence of skin ulceration or urethral injury. |
| Grade II | Distal penile edema with decreased sensation. Injury to skin, constriction of corpus spongiosum. No urethral injury. |
| Grade III | Injury to skin and urethra, without urethral fistula. Loss of distal penile sensation. |
| Grade IV | Complete division of corpus spongiosum leading to urethral fistula and constriction of corpus cavernosum with loss of distal penile sensation. |
| Grade V | Gangrene, necrosis, or complete amputation of penis. |
Presentation of various case reports with penile strangulation injury.
| Review of reported cases | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time to presentation | Comorbidities | Device | Penile condition | Removal technique | Long-term sequelae | |
| Chennamsetty et al. [ | 9 days | None | 7 mm thick, alloy ring | Skin necrosis | Orthopedic pin cutter | None |
| Singh et al. [ | 26 hours | None | Metallic ball bearing ring | Edema/discoloration | Needle aspiration/manual decompression | None |
| Talib et al. [ | 8 hours | Erectile dysfunction | 2.5 × 1.5 cm metallic ring | Penile edema/congestion | Rotating saw | None |
| 6 hours | None | 1 cm thick metal ball bearing ring | Penile edema | 4 needle aspiration | None | |
| Santucci et al. [ | 72 hours | Schizophrenia | 10 lb barbell | Penile edema/discoloration | Air grinder saw | None |
| Eaton et al. [ | 16 hours | None | 1 cm thick × 2 cm wide × 6 cm diameter ring | Penile edema/hyperemia | Gigli saw | None |
| Huang et al. [ | — | Diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease | Plastic bottle | Penile edema | Dental drill | None |
| Zhang et al. [ | 2 days | None | 3 cm diameter × 2 mm thick metallic ring | Penoscrotal edema | Hydraulic cable cutter | None |
| Kyei et al. [ | 12 hours | None | 2 cm wide × 0.8 cm thick metallic nut | Penile edema | Bosch electric grinder | Thermal injury—urethrocutaneous fistula and urethral stricture |
| Morentin et al. [ | 2 weeks | Cerebral vascular accident, smoking, alcoholism, social behavior disorder | Plastic bottle | Necrosis/gangrene | None | Death—multiorgan failure due to sepsis |