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  • Title: Use of the perineal and perineal-abdominal (transpubic) approach for delayed management of pelvic fracture urethral obliterative strictures in children: long-term outcome.
    Author: Podestá ML.
    Journal: J Urol; 1998 Jul; 160(1):160-4. PubMed ID: 9628640.
    Abstract:
    PURPOSE: The results of 2 surgical approaches to restore urethral continuity in children with pelvic fracture urethral obliterative strictures were retrospectively reviewed. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From 1980 to 1995, 30 boys 3.8 to 15.4 years old (median age 8.4) with urethral distraction injuries associated with pelvic fracture were treated with delayed 1-stage anastomotic repair. Surgical access was perineal in 15 cases and perineal-abdominal (transpubic) in 15. There were also associated injuries in 13 patients, including bladder neck laceration in 3. Overall postoperative followup ranged from 2 to 17 years (median 8.5). RESULTS: The stricture-free rate of 1-stage anastomotic repair with perineal and perineal-transpubic access was 84 and 100%, respectively. Four recurrent strictures were treated successfully with additional perineal-transpubic anastomotic urethroplasty in 3 patients and internal urethrotomy in 1. Urinary incontinence developed in 1 boy in the perineal group and in 3 in the transpubic group. Retrospectively associated bladder neck injury was related to the original trauma in 3 of the 4 incontinent boys. The remaining child had overflow incontinence due to an acontractile detrusor. On review 3 of the 4 incontinent patients had severe, unstable type IV pelvic fractures. CONCLUSIONS: Children with urethral distraction injuries associated with pelvic fracture require perineal-transpubic exposure when urethral obliterations of 3 cm. or greater develop or local complications are present in the affected area, making it impossible to create a tension-free, spatulated epithelium-to-epithelium anastomosis to restore urethral continuity via the perineal route. This study also supports previous reports that suggest a relationship of urinary incontinence and associated bladder neck injury with severe pelvic fracture rather than with delayed urethral repair.
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