- PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 69
About This Presentation
Title:

Description:

Priapism and Acute Urinary Retention Joe Lex, MD, FAAEM Chestnut Hill Hospital Philadelphia, PA Priapism - definition/background Persistent painful ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:113
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 70
Provided by: medlectur8
Category:
Tags:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title:


1
Priapism and Acute Urinary
Retention
  • Joe Lex, MD, FAAEM
  • Chestnut Hill Hospital
  • Philadelphia, PA

2
Priapism - definition/background
  • Persistent painful purposeless erection of the
    penis (or clitoris)
  • Frequently idiopathic
  • Associated with some systemic diseases
  • Sometimes seen after intra-cavernosal injections

3
Priapos (Priapus) was the Greek God of fertility
who is usually pictured with a massive erection.
This painting was discovered in the wall of
a temple in Pompeii, destroyed by the eruption of
Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. It shows Priapos
weighing his erection.
4
Cross-section from The Visible Human Project
Prostate
Corpora cavernosa
5
Priapism - physiology
  • Penile erection generated by
  • sensory stimulation of genitalia
  • spinal reflex arc - reflexogenic erection
  • afferent from penis through pudendal nerve to
    sacral spinal erection center (S2-S3-S4)
  • efferent parasympathetic fibers travel back in
    nervi erigentes and stimulate blood vessels of
    corpora cavernosa
  • sympathetic fibers in thoracolumbar erection
    center (T12-L1) innervate vas deferens

6
Priapism - physiology
  • Penile erection generated by
  • psychogenic stimuli from higher brain centers
  • descend through lateral
  • columns and stimulate
  • thoracolumbar and
  • sacral spinal erection
  • centers

7
Priapism - physiology
  • Nitric oxide - an endogenous vasodilator - is
    released from nerve endings and endothelial cells
    and binds to receptors on smooth muscle of
    corpora cavernosa
  • Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) is formed,
    relaxing smooth muscle and allowing engorgement

8
Priapism - physiology
  • Phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) catalyzes cGMP to
    GMP, leading to reversal of the above process
  • Sildenafil (Viagra), a recently released drug
    for erectile dysfunction, acts as a PDE5
    inhibitor, helping to maintain a physiologic
    erection

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
Priapism - pathophysiology
  • Persistent erection of corpora cavernosa due to
    disturbances in detumescence mechanisms - i.e.
    inflow gtgt outflow
  • Corpora spongiosum of the glans and peri-urethral
    region unaffected

12
Priapism - pathophysiology
  • Arterial high-flow - usually due to rupture of
    cavernous artery and unregulated flow into
    lacunar spaces - NOT generally painful
  • Veno-occlusive (low-flow) - full and unremitting
    corporeal veno-occlusion

13
Priapism - frequency
  • Internationally no information available
  • In the USA
  • High-flow rare, usually due to blunt perineal
    injury or penetrating penile trauma
  • Low-flow common in sludging disorders, especially
    sickle-cell disease (about 1/3 of males) and
    leukemic disorders

14
Priapism - morbidity/mortality
  • Deaths have been reported in patients with sickle
    cell disease and priapism, but due to
    complications from underlying disease process
  • Main morbidity is long-term impotence, especially
    when diagnosis and treatment are delayed

15
Sickle Cell Disease
16
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
17
Priapism - demographics
  • Race - no predilection (although sickle cell
    disease, of course, is a condition of the African
    American population)
  • Sex - disease of males. Clitoral priapism has
    been described rarely
  • Age - all ages, but peak in sickle cell patients
    between 19 21 years

18
Priapism - history
  • Arterial high-flow priapism
  • may be delayed after acute injury
  • may be due to vessel spasm, or formation of clot,
    which is reabsorbed
  • less tumescent than venous priapism
  • less painful than venous priapism
  • good long-term prognosis

19
Fractured penis
20
Priapism - history
  • Veno-occlusive priapism
  • painful erection, present for hours to days
  • ask about
  • trauma
  • drugs - therapeutic and illicit
  • self-injection
  • sexual stimulation
  • past history of similar or
  • predisposing factors

21
Priapism - causes
  • Most common - IDIOPATHIC
  • Other causes include
  • leukemia
  • multiple myeloma
  • sickle cell disease
  • tumor infiltration
  • thalassemia
  • spinal cord injury
  • recent Mycoplasma infection
  • amyloidosis
  • black widow spider bites
  • carbon monoxide poisoning
  • recent heparin use
  • oral and intra-cavernosal drugs...

22
Priapism - causes
Caverject self-injection
Urethral suppository
23
Priapism - causes
Vacuum pumps and other sexual aids
24
Priapism - causes
  • psychotropic drugs
  • phenothiazines
  • butyrophenones
  • hydralazine
  • prazosin, labetolol, phentolamine and other
    ?-blockers
  • testosterone
  • metoclopramide
  • calcium-channel blockers
  • anti-coagulants
  • tamoxifen
  • omeprazole
  • hydroxyzine
  • cocaine, marijuana, and ethanol

25
Phoneutria nigriventer - "armed spider"
26
Priapism caused by Phoneutria bite
27
Priapism - physical exam
  • Erect or semi-erect penis with a flaccid glans
  • Search for signs of trauma
  • Search for other possible
  • signs of sludging - florid
  • skin, petechiae,
  • conjunctival injection

28
Priapism - work-up
  • Lab studies
  • If no predisposing factors, a complete blood
    count may help identify a previously undiagnosed
    leukemia
  • Imaging studies
  • Selective penile angiography may be helpful in
    high-flow priapism
  • CT scan - ?useful in segmental disease

29
Priapism - treatment
  • Arterial priapism - 4 options
  • Mechanical iced compression
  • Pharmacologic ?-agonists (watch out for systemic
    blood pressure rise)
  • Surgical fistula ligation (usually leads to
    impotence)
  • Selective embolization new procedure with
    varying degrees of success

30
Priapism - treatment
  • Priapism due to pharmacological agents
  • terbutaline 5 mg po repeated in 15 minutes leads
    to resolution in about 1/3 of patients
  • intracavernous injection of ?-adrenergic
  • phenylephrine 100 to 500 mcg (put 10 mg in 500cc
    NSS ? 20 mcg/ml. Inject 10 to 20 cc every 5-10
    minutes (maximum - 10 doses)
  • dorsal nerve block will be helpful

31
Priapism - treatment
  • Low-flow due to sickle cell disease
  • hydration
  • alkalinization
  • analgesia
  • possible exchange transfusion to get Hgb gt 10 gm
    and HbS lt30
  • intracorporeal ?-adrenergic may be necessary

32
Priapism - treatment
  • Aspiration and irrigation
  • for priapism lasting more than 2 hours
  • discuss with urologist if at all possible
  • MUST warn patient treatment may result in
    permanent impotence
  • conscious sedation may be necessary

33
Priapism - treatment
  • Local anesthetic or penile block
  • Insert 19-g butterfly into engorged corpus
    cavernosum through the glans into the distal
    portion
  • Milk out old blood
  • Irrigate with saline
  • Elastic wrap (Ace) to flaccid penis

34
(No Transcript)
35
Priapism - complications
  • Impotence about 50 incidence
  • Younger patients seem to do better
  • Fibrosis related to tissue ischemia
  • Makes prosthesis placement difficult
  • Gangrene due to ischemia and infection
  • Suprapubic catheter may help avoid

36
Priapism - complications
Fourniers gangrene
37
Acute Urinary Retention
38
Acute Urinary Retention - pathophysiology
  • Prostatic enlargement in older men
  • Acquired structural problem (phimosis)
  • Atonic bladder in women
  • Neurologic disease
  • Diabetes
  • Drug induced
  • Trauma

39
Acute Urinary Retention -symptoms
  • Hesitancy
  • Straining
  • Decrease size
  • force of stream
  • Interruption of
  • stream
  • Incomplete
  • emptying

40
Acute Urinary Retention -presentation
  • Usually a man over age 50 with bladder neck
    obstruction due to prostatic hypertrophy

41
Urethral Catheterization - A Simple Plan
42
Urethral Catheterization - Indications
  • Acute retention with
  • inability to void
  • Urethral or prostatic
  • obstruction leading to
  • hydronephrosis and
  • decreased renal
  • function

43
Urethral Catheterization - Indications
  • Urine output monitoring in critically ill,
    unstable patient
  • Collection of uncontaminated specimen
  • Intermittent bladder decompression
  • Urologic study of anatomy of urinary tract

44
Urethral Catheterization - contraindications
  • Known urethral trauma -
  • blood at meatus,
  • fractured penis, etc.

elephantiasis
45
(No Transcript)
46
Urethral Catheterization - procedure
47
Urethral Catheterization - procedure
  • Female urethra short, straight, and
  • usually wide caliber BUT meatus is not always
    obvious
  • Urethra 4 cm tip
  • balloon 4 cm ? about
  • 1/2 the catheter inserted
  • before inflating balloon

48
Urethral Catheterization - procedure
  • Normal male urethra - 20 cm from tip of external
    meatus to internal meatus
  • Best to insert full hilt
  • before inflating balloon
  • Sometimes helped by
  • straightening urethra
  • and pulling up

49
Urethral Catheterization - procedure
  • Proper equipment is
  • absolutely essential
  • Even with proper
  • preparation, some
  • difficulties are
  • encountered

50
Many styles and colors from which to choose
51
Bladder hypertrophy
52
Acute Urinary Retention -difficulties
53
Acute Urinary Retention -difficulties
Coude catheters
54
Phimosis - scar contraction
  • May be normal variant in uncircumcised boys to
    age 3 or more
  • Dorsal slit may be necessary to access meatus

55
Paraphimosis - edema
  • May be from anasarca or lymphatic obstruction
  • Use cold compresses and squeeze fluid away

56
Meatal stenosis
  • Congenital or acquired scarring
  • Smaller catheter may be all that is required
  • Meatotomy may be necessary

57
Urethral stricture
  • Filiforms and followers can be gently used by the
    Emergency Medicine Specialist - they are not just
    the purview of the urologist

58
Urethral stricture
  • Filiforms are NOT dilators - they are probes and
    must be inserted gently
  • If resistance is met, STOP. Leave the filiform
    in place and insert another
  • Once in the bladder, a follower may be attached
    and inserted, with dilation accomplished by ever
    larger followers

59
Urethral stricture
  • Done properly, filiforms and followers are
    neither bloody nor uncomfortable to the patient

60
Pelvic fractures
Malgaigne fracture
61
Pelvic fractures - dye leak on retrograde
cystourethrogram
62
Old Wives Tale - Catheterization Causes
Hematuria
  • Only 1 in 47 patients had more than 4 RBC per
    high-power field after nontraumatic
    catheterization
  • Sklar DP at el Am J Emerg Med 1986 414-6
  • Hockberger RS Ann Emerg Med 1987 16550-2

63
Old Wives Tale - Rapid Decompression
Is Bad!!
  • 11 studies with gt300 cases published between 1920
    and 1997
  • Hematuria in 2-16 - none severe or required
    treatment
  • No hypotension requiring resuscitation
  • Post-obstructive diuresis responded to careful
    fluid replacement .
  • Nyman MA et al Mayo Clin Proc 1997 72951-956.

64
Other complications
  • Bacteriuria rare at time of insertion, but almost
    inevitable after 10 days
  • False channels
  • Urethritis
  • Strictures (especially
  • latex catheters
  • Perforation (rare)

65
Non-deflating Balloon
  • Common problem, especially in nursing-
  • home patients
  • who have been
  • catheterized for
  • a long time

66
Non-deflating Balloon
  • Overstretch the balloon until it ruptures
  • may require up to 200cc
  • may be uncomfortable if bladder full
  • requires cystoscopy afterward, as inevitably
    leads to fragments in bladder

67
Non-deflating Balloon
  • Erode the balloon until it deflates
  • mineral oil or ether usually work
  • leaves fragments in
  • bladder, requiring
  • cystoscopic removal

68
Non-deflating Balloon
  • Pierce it with a sharp object -
  • transvesicle
  • transvaginal
  • transperineal
  • transurethral
  • May need contrast
  • or ultrasound guidance

69
Non-deflating Balloon
  • Most rational - attack the valve
  • Stepwise approach
  • remove syringe
  • adapter plug
  • insert stylet into
  • inflating channel
  • cut catheter and wait
  • puncture balloon
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com