Title: Urologic Surgery
1Urologic Surgery
- Jason P. Gilleran, MD
- Assistant Professor
- Department of Urology
- Director, Female Pelvic Medicine and
Reconstructive Surgery
2Overview
- Anatomy
- Indications
- Preop Evaluation
- Surgical Techniques
- Complications
- Prostate
- Kidney
- Adrenal
- Testis
- Penis
- Bladder
- Urethra
- Female Urology
3Prostate
4Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia(BPH)
- Presenting symptoms
- Early Frequency, urgency, nocturia
- Late Hesitancy, weak stream, urinary retention
- Medical Therapy
- Alpha Blockers (Flomax, Uroxatral, Cardura)
- 5-a-reductase inhibitors (Proscar, Avodart)
- Evaluation Digital rectal exam (DRE),
uroflowmetry, post-void residual (PVR),
urodynamics in select cases
5Prostate Cancer
- Evaluation Digital rectal exam, prostate
specific antigen (PSA) - Normal level lt4.0 ng/dL, but other factors to
consider - Staging Localized (T1-2), locally advanced
(T3), metastatic (M1) - Usually no presenting symptoms until late
- Mean time to progression 8-13 yrs.
6BPH Surgery
- Transurethral resection of prostate (TURP)
- Transurethral incision of prostate (TUIP)
- Laser ablation/enucleation
- Holmium
- PKP (Green Light)
- Microwave therapy/needle ablation
7TUIP
TURP
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8Complications
- Hematuria
- Bladder neck contracture/stricture
- Retrograde ejaculation
- Total incontinence
9Prostate Cancer Treatment
- Radiation
- Hormonal Therapy, Watchful waiting
- Radical Prostatectomy
- Open retropubic (Walsh) (non) nerve-sparing
- Perineal (Paulson)
- Laparoscopic/Robotic-Assisted
- Complications
- Bleeding (dorsal venous complex)
- Bladder neck contracture
- Erectile dysfunction, incontinence
- Rectal injury
10Radical Prostatectomy Anatomy
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11Post-Prostatectomy Incontinence
- More than 80 resolve within 1 year
- Treatment options
- Kegel exercises, imipramine
- Bulking agents
- Artificial urinary sphincter (AUS)
- Male transobturator sling (AdVance)
12Artificial Urinary Sphincter
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13Male Transobturator Sling(AdVance)
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14Kidney, Adrenal
15Renal Cell Carcinoma
- Classic presentation mass, flank pain, hematuria
- Often found incidentally
- Poor prognosis if metastatic
- Renal vein/IVC involvement
- Diagnosis usually by CT scan (no biopsy)
- Other benign lesions
- AML, Oncocytoma, complex cyst
16Nephrectomy
- Includes perihilar fat
- Left renal vein
- Lumbar, gonadal, and adrenal veins
- Right renal vein
- Direct drainage into IVC
- Adrenalectomy if involved (and normal
contralateral adrenal gland)
17- Surgical Approaches
- Anterior subcostal
- Flank
- Laparoscopic (with or without hand-assisted)
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18MRI of Large Right Renal Mass
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19Partial Nephrectomy
- Exophytic lesions
- Accessible masses lt 4 cm
- Solitary kidney or high-risk for ESRD
- Diabetes, hypertension
- Genetic Diseases
- Von Hippel Lindau (VHL)
20Exophytic Masses
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21Complications
- Radical Nephrectomy
- Bowel injury (hepatic or splenic flexure)
- Splenic injury / splenectomy
- IVC, aortic injury
- Partial Nephrectomy
- Urinoma / leak / fistula (stent and Foley)
- Bleeding (Floseel)
22Pyelonephritis
- Perinephric Abscess
- Emphysematous pyelonephritis
- Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis
23Renal Calculi
- Most common in 4th-6th decades of life
- Etiology Hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria,
hypocitraturia - Presenting symptoms flank pain, hematuria,
nausea, vomiting, fever/chills - Calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate, uric acid,
cystine
24Renal Calculus Treatment
- Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL)
- Ureteroscopy, laser lithotripsy
- Percutaneous nephrostolithotomy
- Open stone extraction (rare)
25- 8.5 Fr ureteroscope
- Nephroscope
- Holmium laser (200, 360 m)
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26Complications
- Urosepsis
- Ureteral stricture
- Ureteral avulsion
- Renal AVM
- Hydrothorax / pneumothorax
- Bowel injury
27Bladder Calculi
- Urinary stasis, foreign body, mucus
- BPH, neurogenic bladder
- Calcium phosphate
- Cystolitholapaxy, remove underlying obstruction
(in men with BPH)
28Adrenal Anatomy
- Embryologically unrelated to kidneys
(neuroectoderm origin) - Three zones
- Glomerulosa (mineralocorticoids aldosterone)
- Fasciculata (glucocorticoids cortisol)
- Reticularis (sex steroids)
29Adrenal Mass
- Often found incidentally
- Most common mass adenoma
- Functional studies, MRI
- Serum cortisol, metanephrines, aldosterone (if
hypokalemic or hypertensive) - Pheochromocytoma
- Adrenal carcinoma
- Myelolipoma
30Laparoscopic Adrenalectomy
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31Scrotum, Testis
32Testicular Cancer
- Most common in men 18-35
- Seminoma
- Non-seminomatous germ cell tumor (NSGCT)
- Presenting symptoms painless mass or lump in
testis - Tumor Markers (b-HCG, AFP)
- CT scan, CXR
33Scrotal/Testis Anatomy
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34Testicular Torsion
- Pediatric population (puberty most common due to
testicular growth and/or bell-clapper
deformity) - One of the few true surgical emergencies in
urology - Scrotal ultrasound documents no flow but clinical
exam alone may be sufficient
35Testicular Trauma
- Scrotal ultrasound
- Hematocele
- Scrotal rupture requires exploration and repair
if presents lt 72 hrs from injury - High degree of clinical suspicion
36Hydrocelectomy
37Varicocelectomy
- Bag of worms on standing, Valsalva examination
- Infertility
- Scrotal pain, thrombosis
- 95 on left (right sided varicocele should prompt
abdominal imaging study)
38Varicocelectomy
- Scrotal
- Inguinal
- Retroperitoneal
- Loupes
- Operating microscope
- Doppler
39Bladder
40Superficial Bladder Cancer
- Most common form of TCC (85)
- Risk factors smoking, radiation, chemo, family
hx, exposure to paints, aniline dyes - Highly dependent on grade of tumor to dictate
management - Low grade can be managed with fulguration
- High grade needs aggressive monitoring,
intravesical therapy - Stage Ta (mucosa/submucosa only), T1 (lamina
propria) - Carcinoma-in-situ (CIS) flat cancer
- Treated with intravesical therapy
- Bad player and many progress to invasive disease
41TURBT
- Risks
- Perforation
- Sepsis
- Ureteral obstruction
- Adjuvant Treatment
- Mitomycin C
- BCG
- Thiotepa
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42Invasive Bladder Cancer
- Stage T2 (detrusor muscle) or beyond (T3,
perivesical fat T4, surrounding organs) - Best therapy radical cystectomy, extended pelvic
lymph node dissection - Aggressive disease requires adjuvant chemotherapy
and/or radiation
43Radical Cystectomy
- Bladder, perivesical fat, prostate (in men),
strip of anterior vagina, uterus/ovaries (in
women), distal ureteral stumps - Frozen section of ureters, urethra
- Pelvic lymph node dissection from common iliacs
to obturator
44Male Cystoprostatectomy
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46Urinary Diversion Techniques
- Incontinent Diversion
- Ileal conduit (most common)
- Continent Diversion
- Renal function
- Favorable disease
- Motivated patient
47Ileal Conduit
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49Complications
- Bowel obstruction, fistula, abscess
- Chronic Diarrhea
- Renal insufficiency
- Ureterointestinal anastomotic stricture
- Metabolic abnormalities
50Penis, Urethra
51Penile/Urethral Anatomy
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52Urethral Stricture
- Common, most are small and short
- Many fail dilation, direct-vision internal
urethrotomy (DVIU) and recur - Straddle injury, gonorrhea, idiopathic
- Classified by length, location, etiology
53Urethral Trauma
54Urethroplasty
- Ideal for dense strictures that failed
urethrotomy (DVIU) - Bulbar strictures lt 2 cm best for end-to-end
primary anastomosis - Buccal graft interposition
- Penile skin onlay flap
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56Complications
- Recurrent stricture
- Fistula, urethral phlegmon
- Salivary duct injury if harvesting buccal graft
- Positioning complications (DVT, leg pain,
rhabdomyolysis)
57Penile Cancer
- Rare GU malignancy with wide spectrum of
presentation - Risk factors uncircumcised, smoking
- Presenting symptoms phimosis, discharge,
palpable mass - Wide excision (2 cm margin) and urethral
preservation if possible
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59Inguinal Lymph Node Dissection
- Presence of persistent palpable lymphadenopathy
after penectomy and antibiotics - Staging and therapeutic
- Complications skin breakdown, lymphedema, seroma
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61Penile Fracture
- Eggplant deformity
- Patient hears a pop followed by immediate
detumescence - Contained within Colles fascia
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62Peyronies Disease
- Originally described in 18th century France
- Penile curvature (dorsal most common) with
palpable plaque - Spontaneous regression possible
- Medical therapy of little use
63Erectile Dysfunction Surgery
- Failed conservative management
- Oral agents (sildenafil, tadalafil, vardenafil)
- Vacuum erection device (VED)
- Intracavernosal injection tx (ICI)
- Semi-rigid vs 2 or 3-piece inflatable penile
prosthesis (IPP) - Patient selection and counseling
64Penile Prosthetic Surgery
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65Complications
- Urethral injury
- Corporal cross-over or perforation
- Erosion
- Infection
- Mechanical Failure
66Female Urology
67Pelvic Organ Prolapse (POP)
- High rate of recurrence for transvaginal pelvic
organ prolapse (POP) repairs - 11 of women will undergo POP surgery by age 80
- Time to recurrence decreases with each repair
68Abdominal MSCIntraoperative View
Peritoneal Edge
Mesh
Bladder
Sigmoid
69Urinary Incontinence
- Stress incontinence
- Urge incontinence
- Mixed incontinence
- Functional overflow incontinence
70Suburethral Sling
- Indicated for moderate-to-severe stress
incontinence - Urethral hypermobility
- Polypropylene mesh
- Sphincteric incompetence
- Bladder neck, autologous fascia
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72Complications
- Obstruction and voiding dysfunction (3-5)
- Urethral erosion, vaginal extrusion (1)
- De novo urge incontinence (?10)
- Bladder, urethral injury, fistula
- Thigh abscess
73Sacral Neuromodulator
- Refractory urge incontinence, urgency/frequency,
urinary retention - S3 nerve root
- Quadripolar lead
- IPG
74Urethral Diverticulum
- Three Ds dysuria, dyspareunia, postvoid
dribbling - Palpable urethral mass, UTIs
- More common in African-American women
- Diagnose on cystoscopy /- VCUG, pelvic MRI
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76Summary
- Wide variety of disease processes
- Non-invasive and pharmacologic approaches
- Surgical options include open, endoscopic,
minimally invasive