Introduction. SARS-CoV-2 causes several negative processes in the body and complicates the course of chronic somatic diseases, causing dysfunction and having a negative effect on many organs and systems of the body, including organs of the reproductive system.Objective. To study morphological changes in testicles of patients who have undergone a new coronavirus infection.Materials and methods. Objects of morphological research were testicular tissues obtained by intraoperative biopsy under intravenous anesthesia served. Material sampling was carried out in 12 patients aged 25–29 years with idiopathic infertility who underwent COVID-19. Patients showed ultrasound signs of fibrosis in the testicles, which were absent before infection with SARS-CoV-2. The biopsy was performed 12 months after COVID-19.Results. In all observations, changes were observed that are characteristic of the inflammatory process, nonbacterial autoimmune genesis. Histio-lymphocytic infiltration of testicular tissue with destruction of single tubules and parenchyma atrophy, combined with varying degrees of sclerosis, was verified.Conclusion. In testicular biopsy specimens from patients who have undergone COVID-19, an autoimmune inflammatory process is recorded, manifested by lymphocytic infiltration of testicular tissue, which was combined with varying degrees of sclerosis.
BACKGROUND: The progress made in reconstructive urethral surgery over the past 20 years has shown the effectiveness of one-stage repair of anterior urethral strictures. Nevertheless, multi-stage urethroplasty retains its primary role in the treatment of patients with the most complex urethral narrowing and obliterations. AIM: To evaluate the immediate and long-term surgical results of multi-stage urethroplasty for penile and bulbar urethral strictures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included 110 men aged 1884 years who underwent multi-stage urethroplasty for the anterior urethral structures in 20102019. The techniques of buccal and skin augmentation or urethral replacement plastics were applied. Before surgery, all patients underwent a standard urological examination. Early surgical complications were evaluated from medical records. Late surgical complications were determined according to examinations that included symptomatic assessment with specialized questionnaires, laboratory tests of serum and urine, physical examination, uroflowmetry, and retrograde urethrography and ureteroscopy (if urinary disorders were detected). The median follow-up was 5 years and 2 months. RESULTS: Early surgical complications were detected in 27 (24.5%) patients. Surgical interventions to resolve them were required in 7 (31.8%) cases: urethrocutaneous fistulas (5), acute urinary retention (1), scrotal hematoma (1). Late surgical complications were detected in 33 (30.0%) patients, including 29 (26.7%) cases of recurrent urethral strictures. All late complications cases were classified as Clavien-Dindo IIIb, and a total of 49 additional operations were performed to eliminate them. The primary success rate for multi-stage urethroplasty was 67.3 % with a median follow-up of 62 months. Only 73 (66.4%) completed all stages of the planned surgery. Urethral integrity throughout its entire length was restored in 67 (60.9%) cases, spontaneous urination in 106 (96.4%) cases. CONCLUSIONS: Multi-stage surgery for anterior urethral strictures is associated with relatively high risks of surgical complications at each stage of treatment. The probability of surgical revision of complications can reach 31.8%. Patients should be informed about the risks of developing surgical complications and the potential for more than two surgeries to achieve treatment goals when planning multi-stage urethroplasty.
The impact of COVID-19 on the organs of the genitourinary system is of particular interest to the urologist. There is insufficient information about this influence up to date. The studies are actively developing and require long-term data analysis to determine possible long-term complications, persistent changes in physiological parameters and anatomical and histological structures, as well as to establish the possibility of regression of these changes and complications. The results obtained will undoubtedly improve not only the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of coronavirus infection and its complications, but also make it possible to predict certain disease's outcomes and changes in the function of organs and systems. In turn, this will give an understanding of the measures that need to be taken to completely avoid or minimize these complications and changes.This review focuses on the impact of COVID-19 on genitourinary organs, particularly its place in the development of the lower urinary tract and reproductive organs lesions, as well as the role of androgens in the course of SARS-CoV-2.
Предложенный способ инвертирующей ортотопической илеоцистопластики может быть рекомендован для применения у пациентов, для которых создание ортотопического тонкокишечного мочевого резервуара невозможно или чревато несостоятельностью анастомоза резервуара с уретрой из-за короткой брыжейки подвздошной кишки при использовании известных методик ортотопической илеоцистопластики.
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