Background:We present here the first case of Cowper's gland abscess complicated by septic shock and breakthrough of the abscess into the paraurethral region, cavernous body, scrotum, and pararectal tissue. Case Presentation: A 63-year-old patient was admitted with complaints of temperature increase up to 39°C, pain and enlargement of the perineum and the right half of the scrotum, frequent and difficulty urination, weakness, dizziness, dry mouth, and a sharp deterioration of the general condition. Clinical-laboratory data showed the presence of septic shock with unstable haemodynamics and many concomitant diseases. From the history, it is known that the patient for more than 20 years suffered from urinary tract infection and urinary disorders. Six months earlier, the patient underwent a puncture of a bulbourethral abscess. According to the ultrasound of the scrotum, TRUS, and MRI, bulbourethral abscess with spread to the right half of the scrotum, a part of the cavernous body, and the cellular tissue of the left sciatic-rectal fossa was diagnosed. Purulent cavities were opened with two incisions and drained. A cystostomy was installed. In the intensive care unit, according to a microbiological study (Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Klebsiella pneumoniae), antibacterial, detoxification, and symptomatic therapy of concomitant diseases were carried out together with a resuscitator and therapist. The patient was discharged on the 30th day with a negative analysis of urine culture, with a cystostomy, which was removed six months after the independent restoration of urination and closure of the fistulous passage between the urethra and Cowper's glands. Conclusion: Untimely treatment of the very rare abscess of the Cowper's gland can lead to serious complications, up to the spread of a purulent process to neighbouring organs and tissues, and the development of septic shock, which will require urgent and intensive therapy with the involvement of experts from interdisciplinary fields.
This review analyzes studies on the negative effects of antibiotics on reproductive organs and their function. Many experimental studies record the negative effect of certain antibiotics, depending on the dose applied, on spermatogenesis. Unlike drugs of other groups, in which a direct cytotoxic effect on the testicular tissue occurs through a change in the level of hormones of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis or through a direct effect on the testicle itself, when using some antibiotics, most often against the background of the inflammatory process, oxidative stress occurs in the testicular tissues, which leads to dystrophic lesions and violations of spermatogenesis indicators.
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