Penile fracture has typical clinical signs. Early surgical treatment is associated with a low incidence of late complications. The high frequency in our area is neither because of physical nor genetic particularities. It is probably because of sociocultural characteristics.
Renal echinococcosis is relatively uncommon compared to liver and lung localizations. Kidney involvement represents 4% of confirmed cases of hydatid disease. We reviewed the clinical findings of a personal series of renal hydatidosis with emphasis on diagnostic and therapeutic issues. A total of 178 renal cysts were collected over a period of 33 years from 1963 to 1996. Clinical, radiologic and laboratory data are analyzed. Radiologic exploration has had an interesting evolution, with the appearance of ultrasonography and computed tomography. Diagnostic accuracy has been greater since the availability of ultrasonography and immunologic studies. Their contribution to the diagnosis of renal hydatid disease is important. We try, with our experience of ultrasonography in the matter of renal hydatid cysts, to underline the role of this exploration. The treatment of hydatid cyst of the kidney is surgical. Renal-sparing surgery, cystectomy plus pericystectomy, is possible in most cases (75%). Nephrectomy (25% of cases) must be reserved for destroyed kidneys resulting from aged cysts opening into the excretory cavities and complicated by renal infection. Whether conservative or radical, the first surgery performed is cystectomy, with germinate membrane removal after controlled evacuation and opening of the cyst, making the subsequent steps of surgery easier.
We determined the value of diagnostic and therapeutic approaches of false penile fractures and the outcome of treatment. We retrospectively reviewed 16 cases of presumed penile fracture with a negative surgical exploration. Clinical presentation, technique of treatment and outcome were noted. The mean age was 39 years (17-64). Nine patients were injured during sexual intercourse. All the patients presented with the presumptive diagnosis of penile fracture. False penile fracture was evoked in one patient presenting a new erection. Surgical penile exploration was carried out for all the patients without any radiological explorations. It revealed nonspecific dartos bleeding in 10 cases and avulsed superficial dorsal vein in six cases requiring venous ends ligation. All the patients regained penile appearance and potency. We can hardly distinguish false penile fracture from 'true' penile fracture with certainty either clinically or radiologically, thus, surgical exploration is mostly necessary. The prognosis is excellent.
Purpose:We evaluate the prognostic factors of recurrence in patients after the surgical repair of vesicovaginal fistula. Materials and methods : From 1985: From to 2002 women with vesicovaginal fistula underwent late (>3 months) surgical repair. A multivariate analysis of the data was performed with the EPI-INFO software. All P-values were two-sided, with odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals. Results: A total number of 73 patients underwent 97 procedures with a mean rate of 1.38 procedures/patient. The overall surgical success rate was 86.7%. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that recurrence was statistically significant for multiple fistulas (single vs two or more), fistula size (>10 mm), fistula type (Type I vs Type II), fistula etiology (obstetrical vs non-obstetrical) and the presence of urinary tract infection before the repair. Recurrence risk was fivefold higher for both the size and the type of the fistula, threefold higher for obstetrical etiology and 4.5-fold higher for multiple fistula. The interposition of flaps was a protective factor for recurrent cases. The surgical approach was not a significant prognostic factor of recurrence. Conclusion: Successful closure of a vesicovaginal fistula requires an accurate and a timely repair using procedures that exploit basic surgical principles. Multiple fistula, size and type of the fistula, and obstetrical etiology were the recurrence risk factors. We recommend in all patients with multiple risk factors for recurrence, the interposition of flaps.
We report a case of segmental infarction of the testis in a 55-year-old man. Past medical history included 12 years of type II diabetes and hypertension. The patient presented with a 2-month history of testicular pain and was found clinically and sonographically to have a testicular tumour. The pathological examination of the partial orchiectomy specimen revealed segmental infarction of the testicle secondary to diabetes microangiopathy. We propose diabetes microangiopathy as a localization and aetiology of segmental testicular infarction. A possible testicular sparing procedure through an inguinal approach may be considered in cases of testicular masses for which the clinical and imaging findings are suggestive of focal testicular infarction.
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