Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction.

Standard

Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction. / Reiß, Christoph-Philip; Schriefer, Philipp; Struss, Werner Jan; Schwaiger, Brigitte; Isbarn, Hendrik; Engel, Oliver; Riechardt, Silke; Fisch, Margit; Ahyai, Sascha Ahmadreza; Dahlem, Roland.

Eur Urol. Band 12 2013. S. e866.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Buch/SammelwerkKonferenzbeitrag - PosterTransfer

Harvard

Reiß, C-P, Schriefer, P, Struss, WJ, Schwaiger, B, Isbarn, H, Engel, O, Riechardt, S, Fisch, M, Ahyai, SA & Dahlem, R 2013, Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction. in Eur Urol. Bd. 12, S. e866, 28th Annual Congress of the European Association of Urology, Milan, Italien, 15.03.13.

APA

Reiß, C-P., Schriefer, P., Struss, W. J., Schwaiger, B., Isbarn, H., Engel, O., Riechardt, S., Fisch, M., Ahyai, S. A., & Dahlem, R. (2013). Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction. in Eur Urol (Band 12, S. e866)

Vancouver

Reiß C-P, Schriefer P, Struss WJ, Schwaiger B, Isbarn H, Engel O et al. Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction. in Eur Urol. Band 12. 2013. S. e866

Bibtex

@inbook{9d64c6b74bff4e17bf0641e625035685,
title = "Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction.",
abstract = "Introduction & ObjectivesRecurrent bladder neck contractures after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia are a rare but a troublesome complication. In these cases, open surgery can be the last therapeutic option before urinary diversion. The study was conducted to assess the outcome, satisfaction and the improvement on quality of life (QoL) for Y/V-plasty in a modified technique in patients with highly recurrent bladder neck contracture (BNC).Material & MethodsComprehensive retrospective analysis by pts chart review and standardized questionnaire including validated questionnaires (IPSS, SF-8, ICIQ-SF) of 10 pts treated by modified Y/V-plasty for highly recurrent BNC after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia in 2009-2012.Previous surgeries, recurrence rate, complications, micturition status, incontinence, satisfaction and quality of life were assessed.Difference to the standard Y/V-plasty was a T-shaped incision of the anterior bladder wall. By this technique two well vascularized flaps were created, which offer the possibility to reconstruct a wide bladder neck and anterior prostatic urethra.ResultsMean age was 69.2 yrs. (range 61-79), mean follow up was 26 months (3-46). All pts. had had multiple previous (trans-)urethral surgeries (mean 3.5, range 2-5). Etiology was transurethral resection of the prostate in 70%, holmium enucleation of the prostate in 20% and HiFU of the prostate in 10%.Success rate was 100%. No complications were reported. No de novo stress incontinence occurred. 1 pt. noted a pre- and postoperative urge incontinence due to overactive bladder.50% of pts. reported a strong or very strong, 20% a moderate and 20% a weak urinary stream. Mean postoperative IPSS-score was 11.3 (range 4-29), postoperative IPSS-QoL was delighted or pleased in 70%, mixed in 10% and due to urodynamic hypocontractile detrusor in one pt. mostly dissatisfied. Pts. satisfaction was very high in 70%, high in 20%, 10% were undecided. Quality of life improved in 90%, 10% report no change.ConclusionsThe technique of modified Y/V-plasty for the repair of highly recurrent bladder neck contractures seems to represents a successful and safe method and improves quality of life with good satisfaction rates. No complications were seen.",
author = "Christoph-Philip Rei{\ss} and Philipp Schriefer and Struss, {Werner Jan} and Brigitte Schwaiger and Hendrik Isbarn and Oliver Engel and Silke Riechardt and Margit Fisch and Ahyai, {Sascha Ahmadreza} and Roland Dahlem",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "e866",
booktitle = "Eur Urol",
note = "null ; Conference date: 15-03-2013 Through 19-03-2013",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Modified Y/V-plasty for the treatment of recurrent bladder neck contracture: Outcome and patient satisfaction.

AU - Reiß, Christoph-Philip

AU - Schriefer, Philipp

AU - Struss, Werner Jan

AU - Schwaiger, Brigitte

AU - Isbarn, Hendrik

AU - Engel, Oliver

AU - Riechardt, Silke

AU - Fisch, Margit

AU - Ahyai, Sascha Ahmadreza

AU - Dahlem, Roland

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Introduction & ObjectivesRecurrent bladder neck contractures after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia are a rare but a troublesome complication. In these cases, open surgery can be the last therapeutic option before urinary diversion. The study was conducted to assess the outcome, satisfaction and the improvement on quality of life (QoL) for Y/V-plasty in a modified technique in patients with highly recurrent bladder neck contracture (BNC).Material & MethodsComprehensive retrospective analysis by pts chart review and standardized questionnaire including validated questionnaires (IPSS, SF-8, ICIQ-SF) of 10 pts treated by modified Y/V-plasty for highly recurrent BNC after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia in 2009-2012.Previous surgeries, recurrence rate, complications, micturition status, incontinence, satisfaction and quality of life were assessed.Difference to the standard Y/V-plasty was a T-shaped incision of the anterior bladder wall. By this technique two well vascularized flaps were created, which offer the possibility to reconstruct a wide bladder neck and anterior prostatic urethra.ResultsMean age was 69.2 yrs. (range 61-79), mean follow up was 26 months (3-46). All pts. had had multiple previous (trans-)urethral surgeries (mean 3.5, range 2-5). Etiology was transurethral resection of the prostate in 70%, holmium enucleation of the prostate in 20% and HiFU of the prostate in 10%.Success rate was 100%. No complications were reported. No de novo stress incontinence occurred. 1 pt. noted a pre- and postoperative urge incontinence due to overactive bladder.50% of pts. reported a strong or very strong, 20% a moderate and 20% a weak urinary stream. Mean postoperative IPSS-score was 11.3 (range 4-29), postoperative IPSS-QoL was delighted or pleased in 70%, mixed in 10% and due to urodynamic hypocontractile detrusor in one pt. mostly dissatisfied. Pts. satisfaction was very high in 70%, high in 20%, 10% were undecided. Quality of life improved in 90%, 10% report no change.ConclusionsThe technique of modified Y/V-plasty for the repair of highly recurrent bladder neck contractures seems to represents a successful and safe method and improves quality of life with good satisfaction rates. No complications were seen.

AB - Introduction & ObjectivesRecurrent bladder neck contractures after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia are a rare but a troublesome complication. In these cases, open surgery can be the last therapeutic option before urinary diversion. The study was conducted to assess the outcome, satisfaction and the improvement on quality of life (QoL) for Y/V-plasty in a modified technique in patients with highly recurrent bladder neck contracture (BNC).Material & MethodsComprehensive retrospective analysis by pts chart review and standardized questionnaire including validated questionnaires (IPSS, SF-8, ICIQ-SF) of 10 pts treated by modified Y/V-plasty for highly recurrent BNC after surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia in 2009-2012.Previous surgeries, recurrence rate, complications, micturition status, incontinence, satisfaction and quality of life were assessed.Difference to the standard Y/V-plasty was a T-shaped incision of the anterior bladder wall. By this technique two well vascularized flaps were created, which offer the possibility to reconstruct a wide bladder neck and anterior prostatic urethra.ResultsMean age was 69.2 yrs. (range 61-79), mean follow up was 26 months (3-46). All pts. had had multiple previous (trans-)urethral surgeries (mean 3.5, range 2-5). Etiology was transurethral resection of the prostate in 70%, holmium enucleation of the prostate in 20% and HiFU of the prostate in 10%.Success rate was 100%. No complications were reported. No de novo stress incontinence occurred. 1 pt. noted a pre- and postoperative urge incontinence due to overactive bladder.50% of pts. reported a strong or very strong, 20% a moderate and 20% a weak urinary stream. Mean postoperative IPSS-score was 11.3 (range 4-29), postoperative IPSS-QoL was delighted or pleased in 70%, mixed in 10% and due to urodynamic hypocontractile detrusor in one pt. mostly dissatisfied. Pts. satisfaction was very high in 70%, high in 20%, 10% were undecided. Quality of life improved in 90%, 10% report no change.ConclusionsThe technique of modified Y/V-plasty for the repair of highly recurrent bladder neck contractures seems to represents a successful and safe method and improves quality of life with good satisfaction rates. No complications were seen.

M3 - Conference contribution - Poster

VL - 12

SP - e866

BT - Eur Urol

Y2 - 15 March 2013 through 19 March 2013

ER -