Isolated male epispadias

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Abstract

Epispadias is a rare urogenital malformation characterized by more or less complete aplasia of the upper part of the urethra. It is commonly associated with bladder exstrophy. Isolated epispadias occurs in 10% of cases. Continent and incontinent epispadias may be distinguished. We report the case of a 29-year old patient presenting with dysuria associated with the impossibility of having sexual intercourses. Physical examination of the external genitalia showed slit-like abnormal urethral opening on the distal half of the dorsal side of the penis. Patient’s penis didn’t have dorsal curvature (chordee), the corpus cavernosum was palpated and slightly lateralized. The abdominal wall was without abnormalities. The remainder of the clinical examination was normal. Given this anomaly, the diagnosis of balano-pubic continent epispadias was retained. Ultrasound of the urinary tract was normal and pelvis X-ray without preparation showed interpubic diastasis. The patient underwent single-stage surgery using Cantwell-Young technique. Immediate postoperative outcome was without abnormalities; the urethral probe was removed 21 days later, after wound healing. Functional and aesthetics outcome evaluated at three and six months was satisfactory without penis shortness.

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APA

Othmane, Y., & Touzani, A. (2017). Isolated male epispadias. Pan African Medical Journal, 28. https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2017.28.202.14220

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