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Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap

INTRODUCTION: Neobladder vaginal fistula (NVF) is a known complication after cystectomy and orthotopic diversion in women, occurring in 3-5% of women. Possible risk factors for fistula formation include compromised tissue vascularity due to surgical dissection and/or radiotherapy, suture line proxim...

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Autores principales: Carlos, Daniela, Abraham, Nitya, Zhou, Tian C., Hung, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedade Brasileira de Urologia 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32648433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2018.0154
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author Carlos, Daniela
Abraham, Nitya
Zhou, Tian C.
Hung, Michael
author_facet Carlos, Daniela
Abraham, Nitya
Zhou, Tian C.
Hung, Michael
author_sort Carlos, Daniela
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Neobladder vaginal fistula (NVF) is a known complication after cystectomy and orthotopic diversion in women, occurring in 3-5% of women. Possible risk factors for fistula formation include compromised tissue vascularity due to surgical dissection and/or radiotherapy, suture line proximity, local tissue recurrence, and injury to the vaginal wall during dissection. The surgical repair of a NVF can be challenging secondary to vaginal shortening, atrophy, local inflammation from chronic exposure to urinary leakage, and the proximity of the neobladder to the anterior vaginal wall. In this video, we present transvaginal repair of a NVF with Martius flap interposition. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is the case of a 47 year old woman with a history of radical cystectomy and creation of a Studer pouch secondary to bladder cancer two years prior who subsequently developed a NVF. Evaluation included an office cystoscopy which demonstrated a 3-4mm left-sided neobladder vaginal fistula at the level of the ileal-urethral anastomosis. No pelvic organ prolapse or evidence of bladder cancer recurrence was appreciated. RESULTS: A vaginal approach for the NVF repair was performed with a Martius flap interposition. A water-tight closure was achieved without any intraoperative or immediate postoperative complications. The urethral Foley was removed at 2 weeks and by 4 weeks the patient did not report any urinary leakage. CONCLUSIONS: Neobladder vaginal fistula is a rare complication following cystectomy and orthotopic urinary diversion that can be repaired using a transvaginal approach. A Martius flap interposition is important to augment success of the repair. If a transvaginal approach fails a transabdominal approach or conversion to cutaneous diversion may be necessary.
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spelling pubmed-78223842021-01-23 Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap Carlos, Daniela Abraham, Nitya Zhou, Tian C. Hung, Michael Int Braz J Urol Video Section INTRODUCTION: Neobladder vaginal fistula (NVF) is a known complication after cystectomy and orthotopic diversion in women, occurring in 3-5% of women. Possible risk factors for fistula formation include compromised tissue vascularity due to surgical dissection and/or radiotherapy, suture line proximity, local tissue recurrence, and injury to the vaginal wall during dissection. The surgical repair of a NVF can be challenging secondary to vaginal shortening, atrophy, local inflammation from chronic exposure to urinary leakage, and the proximity of the neobladder to the anterior vaginal wall. In this video, we present transvaginal repair of a NVF with Martius flap interposition. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is the case of a 47 year old woman with a history of radical cystectomy and creation of a Studer pouch secondary to bladder cancer two years prior who subsequently developed a NVF. Evaluation included an office cystoscopy which demonstrated a 3-4mm left-sided neobladder vaginal fistula at the level of the ileal-urethral anastomosis. No pelvic organ prolapse or evidence of bladder cancer recurrence was appreciated. RESULTS: A vaginal approach for the NVF repair was performed with a Martius flap interposition. A water-tight closure was achieved without any intraoperative or immediate postoperative complications. The urethral Foley was removed at 2 weeks and by 4 weeks the patient did not report any urinary leakage. CONCLUSIONS: Neobladder vaginal fistula is a rare complication following cystectomy and orthotopic urinary diversion that can be repaired using a transvaginal approach. A Martius flap interposition is important to augment success of the repair. If a transvaginal approach fails a transabdominal approach or conversion to cutaneous diversion may be necessary. Sociedade Brasileira de Urologia 2020-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7822384/ /pubmed/32648433 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2018.0154 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Video Section
Carlos, Daniela
Abraham, Nitya
Zhou, Tian C.
Hung, Michael
Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title_full Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title_fullStr Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title_full_unstemmed Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title_short Transvaginal repair of Neobladder Vaginal Fistula with Martius Flap
title_sort transvaginal repair of neobladder vaginal fistula with martius flap
topic Video Section
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32648433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2018.0154
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