We suggest that Peyronie's disease results from repetitive microvascular injury, with fibrin deposition and trapping in the tissue space that is not adequately cleared during the normal remodeling and repair of the tear in the tunica. Fibroblast activation and proliferation, enhanced vessel permeability and generation of chemotactic factors for leukocytes are stimulated by fibrin deposited in the normal process of wound healing. However, in Peyronie's disease the lesion fails to resolve either due to an inability to clear the original stimulus or due to further deposition of fibrin subsequent to repeated trauma. Collagen is also trapped and pathological fibrosis ensues.
Purpose An optimal prostate biopsy in clinical practice is based on a balance between adequate detection of clinically significant prostate cancers (sensitivity), assuredness regarding the accuracy of negative sampling (negative predictive value [NPV]), limited detection of clinically insignificant cancers, and good concordance with whole-gland surgical pathology results to allow accurate risk stratification and disease localization for treatment selection. Inherent within this optimization is variation of the core number, location, labeling, and processing for pathologic evaluation. To date, there is no consensus in this regard. The purpose of this review is 3-fold: 1. To define the optimal number and location of biopsy cores during primary prostate biopsy among men with suspected prostate cancer, 2. To define the optimal method of labeling prostate biopsy cores for pathologic processing that will provide relevant and necessary clinical information for all potential clinical scenarios, and 3. To determine the maximal number of prostate biopsy cores allowable within a specimen jar that would not preclude accurate histologic evaluation of the tissue. Materials and Methods A bibliographic search covering the period up to July, 2012 was conducted using PubMed®. This search yielded approximately 550 articles. Articles were reviewed and categorized based on which of the three objectives of this review was addressed. Data was extracted, analyzed, and summarized. Recommendations based on this literature review and our clinical experience is provided. Results The use of 10–12-core extended-sampling protocols increases cancer detection rates (CDRs) compared to traditional sextant sampling methods and reduces the likelihood that patients will require a repeat biopsy by increasing NPV, ultimately allowing more accurate risk stratification without increasing the likelihood of detecting insignificant cancers. As the number of cores increases above 12 cores, the increase in diagnostic yield becomes marginal. Only limited evidence supports the use of initial biopsy schemes involving more than 12 cores or saturation. Apical and laterally directed sampling of the peripheral zone increases CDR, reduces the need for repeat biopsies, and predicts pathological features on prostatectomy while transition-zone biopsies do not. There is little data to suggest that knowing the exact site of an individual positive biopsy core provides meaningful clinical information. However, determining laterality of cancer on biopsy may be helpful for both predicting sites of extracapsular extension and therapeutic planning. Placement of multiple biopsy cores in a single container (>2) appears to compromise pathologic evaluation, which can reduce CDR and increase the likelihood of equivocal diagnoses. Conclusions A 12-core systematic biopsy that incorporates apical and far-lateral cores in the template distribution allows maximal cancer detection, avoidance of a repeat biopsy, and adequate information for both identifying men who need therapy and...
Excision with primary anastomosis for anterior urethral stricture has a high success rate of 98.8% with durable long-term results in most patients. Complications are few, of short duration and self-limited. Where applicable, we believe that the procedure clearly is the choice for short anterior urethral strictures.
Penile amputation is an uncommon injury resulting from self-mutilation, felonious assault, or accidental trauma. Management requires resuscitation and stabilization of the patient with particular attention to underlying psychiatric illness. Amputated tissue can be preserved under hypothermic conditions in preparation for surgical replantation. Current replantation techniques rely on microsurgical approximation of the dorsal structures and cavernosal arteries with uniformly good results. Phallic replacement may be necessary when the amputated segment is lost. Microsurgical free forearm flap phalloplasty is the current mainstay of penile replacement surgery. Although urethral complications remain problematic, the results continue to be acceptable with regard to appearance and function. A unique subset of patients sustaining amputation injury is children. Both replantation and phallic construction have been successful in children and represent an alternative to gender reassignment.
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