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Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report

BACKGROUND: We review urological procedures performed on a spinal cord injury patient during three decades. CASE PRESENTATION: A 23-year-old male patient sustained T-12 paraplegia in 1971. In 1972, intravenous urography showed both kidneys functioning well; division of external urethral sphincter wa...

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Autores principales: Vaidyanathan, Subramanian, Soni, Bakul M, Hughes, Peter L, Singh, Gurpreet, Mansour, Paul, Oo, Tun
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2803993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20062593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-9334
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author Vaidyanathan, Subramanian
Soni, Bakul M
Hughes, Peter L
Singh, Gurpreet
Mansour, Paul
Oo, Tun
author_facet Vaidyanathan, Subramanian
Soni, Bakul M
Hughes, Peter L
Singh, Gurpreet
Mansour, Paul
Oo, Tun
author_sort Vaidyanathan, Subramanian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We review urological procedures performed on a spinal cord injury patient during three decades. CASE PRESENTATION: A 23-year-old male patient sustained T-12 paraplegia in 1971. In 1972, intravenous urography showed both kidneys functioning well; division of external urethral sphincter was performed. In 1976, reimplantation of left ureter (Lich-Gregoir) was carried out for vesicoureteric reflux. As reflux persisted, left ureter was reimplanted by psoas hitch-Boari flap technique in 1978. This patient suffered from severe pain in legs; intrathecal injection of phenol was performed twice in 1979. The segment bearing the scarred spinal cord was removed in September 1982. This patient required continuous catheter drainage. Deep median sphincterotomy was performed in 1984. As the left kidney showed little function, left nephroureterectomy was performed in 1986. In an attempt to obviate the need for an indwelling catheter, bladder neck resection and tri-radiate sphincterotomy were carried out in 1989; but these procedures proved futile. UroLume prosthesis was inserted and splinted the urethra from prostatic apex to bulb in October 1990. As mucosa was apposing distal to stent, in November 1990, second UroLume stent was hitched inside distal end of first. In March 1991, urethroscopy showed the distal end of the distal stent had fragmented; loose wires were removed. In April 1991, this patient developed sweating, shivering and haematuria. Urine showed Pseudomonas. Suprapubic cystostomy was performed. Suprapubic cystostomy was done again the next day, as the catheter was pulled out accidentally during night. Subsequently, a 16 Fr Silastic catheter was passed per urethra and suprapubic catheter was removed. In July 1993, Urocoil stent was put inside UroLume stent with distal end of Urocoil stent lying free in urethra. In September 1993, this patient was struggling to pass urine. Urocoil stent had migrated to bladder; therefore, Urocoil stent was removed and a Memotherm stent was deployed. This patient continued to experience trouble with micturition; therefore, Memotherm stent was removed. Currently, wires of UroLume stent protrude in to urethra, which tend to puncture the balloon of urethral Foley catheter, especially when the patient performs manual evacuation of bowels. CONCLUSION: We failed to implement intermittent catheterisation along with anti-cholinergic therapy. Instead, we performed several urological procedures with unsatisfactory outcome; the patient lost his left kidney. We believe that honest review of clinical practice will help towards learning from past mistakes.
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spelling pubmed-28039932010-01-10 Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report Vaidyanathan, Subramanian Soni, Bakul M Hughes, Peter L Singh, Gurpreet Mansour, Paul Oo, Tun Cases J Case Report BACKGROUND: We review urological procedures performed on a spinal cord injury patient during three decades. CASE PRESENTATION: A 23-year-old male patient sustained T-12 paraplegia in 1971. In 1972, intravenous urography showed both kidneys functioning well; division of external urethral sphincter was performed. In 1976, reimplantation of left ureter (Lich-Gregoir) was carried out for vesicoureteric reflux. As reflux persisted, left ureter was reimplanted by psoas hitch-Boari flap technique in 1978. This patient suffered from severe pain in legs; intrathecal injection of phenol was performed twice in 1979. The segment bearing the scarred spinal cord was removed in September 1982. This patient required continuous catheter drainage. Deep median sphincterotomy was performed in 1984. As the left kidney showed little function, left nephroureterectomy was performed in 1986. In an attempt to obviate the need for an indwelling catheter, bladder neck resection and tri-radiate sphincterotomy were carried out in 1989; but these procedures proved futile. UroLume prosthesis was inserted and splinted the urethra from prostatic apex to bulb in October 1990. As mucosa was apposing distal to stent, in November 1990, second UroLume stent was hitched inside distal end of first. In March 1991, urethroscopy showed the distal end of the distal stent had fragmented; loose wires were removed. In April 1991, this patient developed sweating, shivering and haematuria. Urine showed Pseudomonas. Suprapubic cystostomy was performed. Suprapubic cystostomy was done again the next day, as the catheter was pulled out accidentally during night. Subsequently, a 16 Fr Silastic catheter was passed per urethra and suprapubic catheter was removed. In July 1993, Urocoil stent was put inside UroLume stent with distal end of Urocoil stent lying free in urethra. In September 1993, this patient was struggling to pass urine. Urocoil stent had migrated to bladder; therefore, Urocoil stent was removed and a Memotherm stent was deployed. This patient continued to experience trouble with micturition; therefore, Memotherm stent was removed. Currently, wires of UroLume stent protrude in to urethra, which tend to puncture the balloon of urethral Foley catheter, especially when the patient performs manual evacuation of bowels. CONCLUSION: We failed to implement intermittent catheterisation along with anti-cholinergic therapy. Instead, we performed several urological procedures with unsatisfactory outcome; the patient lost his left kidney. We believe that honest review of clinical practice will help towards learning from past mistakes. BioMed Central 2009-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2803993/ /pubmed/20062593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-9334 Text en Copyright ©2009 Vaidyanathan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Vaidyanathan, Subramanian
Soni, Bakul M
Hughes, Peter L
Singh, Gurpreet
Mansour, Paul
Oo, Tun
Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title_full Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title_fullStr Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title_short Lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
title_sort lessons we learn from review of urological procedures performed during three decades in a spinal cord injury patient: a case report
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2803993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20062593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-9334
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