1 / 31

Urological Emergencies for the Non-Urologist

Urological Emergencies for the Non-Urologist. Mr C Dawson MS FRCS Consultant Urologist Edith Cavell Hospital Peterborough. Content of the Presentation. Renal Colic Testicular Torsion Trauma Paraphimosis Priapism. Renal Colic. Does not always present with classic history

sharis
Télécharger la présentation

Urological Emergencies for the Non-Urologist

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Urological Emergencies for the Non-Urologist Mr C Dawson MS FRCS Consultant Urologist Edith Cavell Hospital Peterborough

  2. Content of the Presentation • Renal Colic • Testicular Torsion • Trauma • Paraphimosis • Priapism

  3. Renal Colic • Does not always present with classic history • Classically presents with loin pain radiating around abdomen, as stone moves down ureter • May get testicular/labial pain +/- strangury if stone impacts at VUJ

  4. Renal Colic • Full examination essential – primarily to rule out other causes for pain • Look for signs of Sepsis • Differential diagnosis includes • Acute Appendicitis • Diverticulitis • Salpingitis • Ruptured Aortic Aneurysm • Pyelonephritis • Ectopic Pregnancy

  5. Renal Colic - Investigations • Routine Urinalysis – microscopic haematuria is common but not invariable • IVP • Particularly in patients over 50 (?AAA) • USS and KUB if contrast allergic • Caution in Pregnancy • Pregnancy Test in all fertile women of child bearing age

  6. Renal Colic - Management • If NO signs of ureteric obstruction on IVP AND Pain free • Home with explanation of symptoms • Review after 2/52 in OPD • If IVP shows obstruction of ureter • Admit for observation • May still be allowed home for trial of stone passage • If Obstructed AND signs of Sepsis • Urgent Nephrostomy

  7. Size of Stone < 4mm 4-6 mm > 6mm Management Conservative: 90% pass spontaneously 50% pass spontaneously – trial of passage Intervention likely, only 10% pass spontaneously Renal Colic - Management

  8. Testicular Torsion • Can occur at any age • Most common in adolescents • Occasionally seen in neonates • In infants (and esp neonates) the symptoms and signs are imprecise • Prompt action required to avoid irreversible testicular ischaemia

  9. Testicular Torsion • Diagnosis usually made solely on basis of clinical examination • Testis usually swollen and exquisitely tender • Lies horizontally and retracted compared to normal side

  10. Testicular Torsion • Studies have shown that only 25% of boys presenting with acute scrotal swelling with have torsion • No reliable diagnostic test exists • Doppler USS can effectively establish the presence of arterial inflow • Surgical exploration remains the final arbiter, and should not be delayed whilst waiting for investigations

  11. Testicular Torsion

  12. Urological Trauma • Fortunately very rare • Typical victims • Young men involved in sport (55%) • People in RTAs (25%) • Domestic or industrial accidents (15%) • Victims of Assault (5%)

  13. Urological Trauma • Upper Urinary Tract • Renal injuries • Lower Urinary Tract • Bladder • Urethra • External Genitalia

  14. Urological Trauma - Overview • Take a careful history • Mechanism of injury (blunt trauma, penetrating trauma) • Velocity of injury • Careful Assessment • Careful Examination • ABC of Primary Survey • Baseline Investigations • Appropriate Radiology and additional imaging

  15. From ABC of Major Trauma (chapter by Cope and Stebbings) Primary Survey

  16. Renal Trauma • The Kidney is the most commonly injured urological organ • Injuries can be blunt (80-90%) or penetrating • Blunt trauma occurs with upper abdominal injury and rapid deceleration • Such injuries usually involve multiple organ systems and patients – other injuries must be suspected and excluded

  17. Renal Trauma – Radiological Assesment • Adult patient with blunt trauma • Visible haematuria, or microscopic haematuria and shock - Needs Radiological assessment • Microscopic haematuria without shock – radiological assessment not required • Adult patients with penetrating trauma / All Paediatric patients – require radiological assessment

  18. Renal trauma • Radiological Assessment should begin with IVU – Most patients adequately staged this way • CT has largely replaced the arteriogram and IVU in the diagnosis and management of severe abdominal or GU trauma • Patients who are haemodynamically unstable will require immediate laparotomy • 85% of blunt renal injuries require no surgery, 5-10% require judgement and surgical exploration, 5% are non-salvageable and require nephrectomy

  19. Lower Urinary Tract – Bladder and Urethra • Approx 90% of bladder injuries result from blunt trauma • The bladder is commonly injured in pelvic fractures • The bladder in a child is an abdominal (not pelvic) organ and is more vulnerable to injury

  20. Lower Urinary Tract – Bladder and Urethra • Signs and symptoms of bladder rupture are non specific • Frank haematuria occurs in 95%, m/scopic haematuria in the remainder • Patient may complain of inability to void • Suprapubic tenderness • Intraperitoneal rupture (1/3 of all bladder injuries) is common in children

  21. Management of Bladder injury • Do NOT pass urethral catheter if there is blood at meatus • Retrograde urethrography may be performed in place of IVU

  22. Urethral Injury • Commonly associated with Straddle injuries • Patient may be unable to void • Most patients will have blood at meatus and swelling/bruising of penis/scrotum and perineum. • Rectal examination may reveal a “high-riding prostate”

  23. Urethral Injury • All patients require a urethrogram • Do NOT attempt urethral catheterisation – may convert a partial tear into a complete rupture • If patients require immediate laparotomy then bladder may be catheterised suprapubically • Long term sequelae of this injury include incontinence, stricture, and impotence

  24. Scrotal Trauma • Testes may be damaged by direct blow • If swelling is moderate it usually settles • Severe swelling may require exploration to exclude testicular laceration

  25. Urological Trauma – further reading • ABC of major Trauma – Edited by Skinner et al. BMJ Publishing Group • Renal and Ureteric Injuries – McAninch JW in Adult and Paediatric Urology (edited by Gillenwater) • Genitourinary Trauma – Peters and Sagalowsky in Campbell’s Urology (edited by Walsh et al)

  26. Paraphimosis • May result from phimosis • Commonly occurs in catheterised patients • Good catheter care prevents this problem! • May be reduced after gentle compression of glans and distal penis • Occasionally may require surgical release of paraphimosis under LA (or GA in children)

  27. Priapism • A persistent painful erection that is not related to sexual desire • Causes • Intracavernosal pharmacotherapy for Erectile Dysfunction • Idiopathic • Penile or Spinal Cord trauma • Assoc with Leukaemia, Sickle Cell disease or Pelvic Trauma

  28. Priapism • Early treatment is the key element • Climbing stairs (arterial “steal” phenomenon) or ice packs may resolve • Aspiration of Corpora cavernosa may be required

  29. Priapism • Two types • Low flow (anoxic) – blood aspirated is dark and deoxygenated • High flow – blood is bright red • Infusion of alpha agonist (phenylephrine) may be tried in low flow priapism • Surgical Shunting may be attempted as a last resort

  30. Summary • Renal Colic • Testicular Torsion • Trauma • Paraphimosis • Priapism

  31. Thank You

More Related