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1.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 79: 339-342, 2021 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33508614

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Penile urethral stones are very and constitutes less than 1% of the urinary tract stones and commoner in males. They are either primary or secondary. The clinical diagnosis require high index of suspicion. CASE PRESENTATION: A 30-year-old male was complaining of penile pain, weak urinary stream and dribbling at the end of micturition for 2 months, later on he developed severe dysuria and a tender nodule over the dorsal penile surface. An attempted urethral catheterization was failed. There was no history of urethral trauma or instrumentation. Examination of genitalia revealed a normal meatus with a fistula at dorsal mid penile shaft and the urine were coming out from that opening with surrounding redness and edema with palpable firm nodule in the penile shaft. A pelvic x-ray revealed a mid-urethral radiopaque shadow, cystoscopy revealed an impacted stone in mid-bulbar urethra, attempts of stone extraction was failed. An open ventral urethral incision was made and the stone was removed, dorsal fistulectomy and repair was performed. Foley's catheter was placed and removed later after 21 days. The patient had uneventful postoperative period and the follow up was done up to 6 months with no postoperative complications. CONCLUSION: The clinical diagnosis of penile urethral stones require high index of suspicion. Management options are variable depending on impaction site, the size, and associated urethral pathologies. The fistula tract require excised and repair.

2.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 77: 198-200, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33166819

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Supernumerary penises is an extremely rare congenital anomaly which affects one in every 5-6 million live births. Affected patients may have only a rudimentary penis, supernumerary penile glances or complete duplication or triplication of penises. Some patients may have some other associated congenital anomalies. PRESENTATION OF CASE: A 3-month-old child presented because of left side hydrocele. There were evidence of two supernumerary penises in the perineum, the first one was about 2 cm in length with a glans and was attached to the root of the penis, and the third one was about 1 cm and was below the scrotum. Hydrocelectomy was performed. The two supernumerary penises were extending to perineal region and were attached to original penis, both had corpora cavernosum and spongiosum with no urethra inside. Both supernumerary penises were excised and both corpora were sutured with a fine slowly absorbable suture material. The patient was discharged with no postoperative events and follow up was done for one years with no reported adverse events. CONCLUSION: Triphallia (three penises) is unreported condition in human until now. Patients with supernumerary penises have unique presentation and no cases are identical. The position of the penis may be ectopic or orthotopic. Treatment is difficult because it poses medical, ethical, and cosmetic aspects. A combined multidisciplinary team is required for the management and long term follow up is required. Excision or reconstruction of the duplicate penis is required depending on the corporal development and anatomy of the urethra.

3.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 75: 189-192, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32966926

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Crossed testicular ectopia is a rare form of urogenital anomalies in which both testes are migrated and descend through a single inguinal canal, one or both testes may be ectopic in the abdomen, the inguinal region or descent to the hemi-scrotum with empty contralateral hemi-scrotum. CASE PRESENTATION: A 1.5-year-old male patient had an empty left scrotum with no palpable testis in the inguinal region with a palpable testis in the right scrotum with palpable other testis in the right inguinal region. Ultrasound examination showed the right testis in the right scrotum and another testis measuring in the right inguinal region giving suggestion of both testes in the right side. During operation two testes was found in the right inguinal region with two small indirect inguinal sacs. Herniotomy was performed for both sacs. The right testis was placed and fixed in the right hemi-scrotum and the left testis was fixed in the left hemi-scrotum through trans-septal window. CONCLUSION: During surgery, the surgeon should adopt a conservative approach to preserve the fertility. Trans-septal orchiopexy or extra-peritoneal transposition orchiopexy is advised. In case of persistent Müllerian duct syndrome, preservation of the Müllerian remnants is recommended to preserve blood supply to the vas deferens and testis. Karyotyping may be required in some cases specially if associated with other congenital anomalies of the genitalia. Patients usually need long term follow up because such patients may have future fertility problems and there is an increased risk of the development of testicular cancer.

4.
Ann Med Surg (Lond) ; 55: 107-110, 2020 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32477507

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Sexual dysfunction is a common problem in patients with chronic kidney disease. Disturbances in sexual function are noticed in early stages of chronic kidney diseases and deteriorate further as renal function declines. This is due to uremic effects, comorbid illness, anemia, hormonal disturbances, autonomic neuropathy, vascular diseases, hyperparathyroidism, hyperprolactinemia, side effects of medications, and psychosocial factors. PATIENTS AND METHOD: This is a cross-sectional study which included 59 male patients who underwent renal transplantation for more than 6 months. The International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF-5) was adopted in our study to record the erectile function. RESULTS: The mean age was 49.41 years, and the mean number of hemodialysis per month was 5.31. The cause of the chronic kidney disease was diabetes mellitus in 35.59%, glomerulonephritis in 20.34%, and hypertension in 16.95%, other causes were diagnosed in order of decreasing frequency. Most patients developed improvement in the erectile function after transplantation. There was significant correlation with 3 of the elements of the IIFE-5.i.e; penile hardness pre-penetration, Maintaining erection during intercourse, and Difficulty to maintain erection to complete the intercourse (p values 0.015, 0.011, and 0.023) respectively, and the overall improvement after transplantation which showed a p-value of less than 0.031, while there was no significant correlation with Confidence with erection and Satisfaction with intercourse before and after transplantation (p values 0.113 and 0.121) respectively. One of the patients (1.7%) developed severe dysfunction after that. CONCLUSION: ED is common sequel of chronic kidney disease. The etiology is multifactorial and may be worsen by advanced age, presence of diabetes mellitus and prolonged duration of hemodialysis. Renal transplantation has a positive impact on sexual function and lead to improvement of erectile dysfunction. Erectile dysfunction that persists after kidney transplantation is usually attributed to multiple preexisting comorbidities.

5.
Artículo en Chino | WPRIM (Pacífico Occidental) | ID: wpr-950305

RESUMEN

Objective: To evaluate a novel polyherbal formulation (BSVT) containing the standardized extracts from the leaves of Boerhavia diffusa, Solidago virgaurea, Vitex negundo, and thymoquinone in CCl

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