Abstract

Introduction

Open adenomectomy of the prostate, although performed less frequently, is still indicated in patients with prostate adenoma > 100 ml.

Aim

This study assessed the frequency of isolated bladder neck stenosis after surgery and the effectiveness of internal optical urethrotomy as monotherapy and in combination with transurethral resection in the treatment of this complication.

Material and methods

One thousand five hundred thirty-eight Millin’s operations and 381 trans-vesical adenomectomies were performed in patients with prostate adenoma. In 50 patients, the circular hemostatic suture was applied using the de la Peña technique because of bleeding after surgery. The retrospective analysis compared the incidence of isolated bladder neck stenosis depending on the type of surgery.

Results

Isolated bladder neck stenosis or narrowing of the neck combined with partial stenosis of the site after adenomectomy occurred in 0.52% (8/1539) of patients after Millin’s operation and in 1.05% of patients (4/381) after trans-vesical adenomectomy. All strictures of the bladder after trans-vesical surgery occurred within 12 month after the procedure, and 25% of stenoses after Millin’s operation occurred many years after the surgery. Internal optical urethrotomy as monotherapy or in combination with scar resection resulted in recovery after one treatment in 16 out of 17 patients.

Conclusions

Internal optical urethrotomy as monotherapy or in combination with scar resection was effective in nearly all patients with bladder neck stenosis.

Details

Title
Internal optical urethrotomy is the treatment of choice in stenosis of the bladder neck after open prostate adenectomy
Author
Borkowski, Tomasz; Michalec, Jędrzej; Kuzaka, Bolesław; Borkowski, Andrzej; Radziszewski, Piotr
Pages
427-432
Publication year
2019
Publication date
2019
Publisher
Termedia Publishing House
ISSN
18954588
e-ISSN
22990054
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2288683542
Copyright
© 2019. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.