| Literature DB >> 35049822 |
Daniele Zambelli1, Giulia Ballotta1, Simona Valentini1, Marco Cunto1.
Abstract
Perineal hernia refers to the herniation of pelvic and abdominal viscera into the subcutaneous perineal region through a pelvic diaphragm weakness: a concomitant prostatic disease is observed in 25-59% of cases. Prostatectomy involves the removal of the prostate, either partially (partial prostatectomy) or completely (total prostatectomy). In case of complicated perineal hernia, staged procedures are recommended: celiotomy in order to perform colopexy, vasopexy, cystopexy, and/or to treat the prostatic disease, and perineal access in order to repair the perineal hernia. Very few reports relate prostatectomy using a perineal approach and, to the extent of the author's knowledge, this technique has not been thoroughly investigated in the literature. The aim of this article is to retrospectively describe the total perineal prostatectomy in dogs presenting perineal hernia with concomitant prostatic diseases which required the removal of the gland. The experience in six dogs (three dogs with the prostate within hernial contents and three dogs with intrapelvic prostate) is reported as well as advantages, disadvantages, and limitations of the surgical procedure. In the authors' clinical practice, total perineal prostatectomy has been a useful surgical approach to canine prostatic diseases, proven to be safe, well tolerated, and effective.Entities:
Keywords: dog; perineal hernia; perineal prostatectomy; total prostatectomy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35049822 PMCID: PMC8773252 DOI: 10.3390/ani12020200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Surgery steps: (a) the prostate and the bladder are identified after perineal incision and blunt dissection; (b) a sterile disposable Penrose drain set or a silicone vascular tape was then positioned around the urethra to better identify it during the subsequent steps of the procedure.
Figure 2Surgery steps: (a) ligatures of the the neuro-vascular bundles located dorso-laterally to the prostate; (b) the vas deferens were identified and ligated before the gland was tractioned caudally.
Figure 3Surgery steps: (a) the prostate was tractioned caudally; (b) stay suture placement in the neck of the bladder.
Figure 4Surgery steps: (a) the catheter is reintroduced into the urethra to realign the stumps and allow the vesicourethral anastomosis; (b) vesicourethral anastomosis.
Figure 58-year-old mixed breed dog. Prostate displacement in the hernial contents: macroscopic appearance of the gland.
Signalment, hernia and prostatic localization details, clinical findings for dogs undergone perineal prostatectomy.
| Case | Signalment | Perineal Hernia | Clinical Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 8 yo mixed breed | Right unilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, lethargy, anorexia, hypothermia, tachycardia, mucosal congestion, seizures |
| 2 | 9 yo mixed breed | Right unilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, lethargy, fecal tenesmus, anorexia, abdominal pain, haematuria, gait abnormalities |
| 3 | 11 yo Maltese | Bilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, lethargy, fecal tenesmus, hypothermia, tachycardia, mucosal congestion |
| 4 | 7 yo Lagotto Italiano | Right unilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, fecal tenesmus, abdominal pain, intermittent urethrorrhagia |
| 5 | 10 yo mixed breed | Bilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, lethargy, fecal tenesmus, stranguria |
| 6 | 6 yo mixed breed | Bilateral | Swelling of the perineal region, lethargy, fecal tenesmus, anorexia, gait abnormalities |
Preoperative hematology and biochemistry tests, urinalysis results, radiographic (RX) and echographic (US) results, final diagnosis for dogs undergone perineal prostatectomy; BPH = benign prostatic hyperplasia.
| Case | Hematology and Biochemistry | Urinalysis | RX | US | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AST 331 U/L (20–42); ALP 533 U/L (42–180) | Hematuria | Pelvic region | Prostate 3.5 × 4.4 cm | Prostatitis |
| 2 | Hgb 24.3% (12–18); HCT 69.8% (37–55) | Hematuria | Pelvic region | Prostate 4.60 × 4.71 cm | Prostatitis |
| 3 | Creatinina 1.61 mg/dL (0.75–1.4) | Hematuria | Abdominal and pelvic regions | Prostate 2.6 × 3.6 cm | Chronic prostatitisand large prostatic abscess |
| 4 | MPV 18.3 fL (6.6–10.9); AST 58 U/L (15–52) | Hematuria | Abdominal and pelvic regions | Prostate 4.55 × 4.62 cm | BPH |
| 5 | WBC 26,640/mm3 (6000–17,000) | Hematuria | Abdominal and pelvic regions | Prostatic size were not ultrasonographically investigated. | Prostatitis |
| 6 | Neutrophils 13,188/mm3 (3000–12,000) | Hematuria | Abdominal and thoracic | Prostate 3.22 × 3.87 cm, | Adenocarcinoma |