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Heroic measures may not always be justified in extensive urethral stricture due to lichen sclerosus (balanitis xerotica obliterans).
uretra, lichen Sclerosus
Peterson AC, Palminteri
E, Lazzeri M, Guazzoni G, Barbagli G, Webster GD. Heroic measures may not always be justified in
extensive urethral stricture due to lichen sclerosus (balanitis xerotica
obliterans). Urology. 2004
Sep;64(3):565-8.
OBJECTIVES:
Strictures due to lichen sclerosus (LS) may affect the urethra as far
proximally as the mid-bulb. For such strictures, a staged full-length repair is
required and should use a nonpenile graft source such as buccal mucosa. Many
cases occur in a population already accustomed to seated voiding, leading us to
re-evaluate this approach and, in some circumstances, recommend definitive
perineal urethrostomy alone.
METHODS: We reviewed the medical records and
retrograde urethrograms of all patients undergoing surgery for LS at our
facilities between January 1991 and June 2002.
RESULTS: A total of 63 patients,
with an average age of 54.2 years, underwent surgery for LS stricture with an
average follow-up of 38.5 months (range 4 to 117). Of the 63 patients, 19
underwent grafting in preparation for future reconstruction. Of these, 11
completed the second-stage repair, and 8 patients elected not to undergo the
second stage of the repair, leaving a functional perineal urethrostomy. This led
us to look more critically at definitive perineal urethrostomy alone for some
patients. Parallel with the staged repairs, and subsequent to them, 44 patients
underwent perineal urethrostomy alone.
CONCLUSIONS: The often extensive nature
of LS, the prevailing philosophy that urethroplasty must use nonpenile skin,
the limited availability of such sources, and the acceptance of many patients
for seated voiding makes definitive perineal urethrostomy alone a viable
treatment option. In all our cases, this satisfied patients' quality of life
concerns, leaving the anterior urethra dry and amenable to future repair.
Younger men desirous of penile voiding should still be considered for staged
repair using current techniques.
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