We present our experience in the treatment of 8 patients with priapism after intravenous injection of vasoactive drugs, and of 15 patients with persistent erections in the course of transurethral cystoscopy surgery. All of them were treated with intracavernous injection of 10 mg ethylephrine (1 ml Efortil-R). The results were satisfactory in all cases. In one patient we had to draw 75 ml blood and give another 10 mg dose of ethylephrine. We have not observed secondary effects of drug administration except two local haematomas with spontaneous resolution. We consider that this treatment is very useful in the management of patients with persistent erections or priapism because of the excellent results obtained without adverse effects.
We report 5 cases of renal allograft rupture in which diagnosis was established early through clinical data, laboratory tests and echography. Immediate surgery confirmed the suspicion in all cases. Acute rejection was present in 4 patients and in 1 the previous surgical puncture from the perirenal collection demonstrated serohematic fluid with a biological character similar to that of lymph. This latter case seemed to confirm the suspicion that any process associated with edema in a kidney with obstructed lymphatic tracts (meticulous lymphatic ligatures during donor extraction) is capable of causing a rupture. Conventional surgical treatment is dangerous and insecure on an edematous and friable kidney, resulting in a nephrectomy rate of 55.7 per cent and a postoperative death rate of 8 per cent. Hematoma evacuation, hemostasis by local compression and tridimensional containment of the ruptured areas should be the principles of this operation. By means of renal corsetage with lyophilized human dura these principles can be achieved. This surgical technique, which is simple and secure, its variations and future possibilities are described. In 3 of our 5 patients corsetage with lyophilized human dura was applied. All 5 grafts have taken. Renal function is good in 3 cases and acceptable in 2 at followup between 2 and 15 months.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.