Background: In mini-invasive surgery for the treatment of urinary incontinence injectable substances such as politef, autologous fat or bovine collagen, which can increase urethral resistance or support the sphincteric one are particularly used. It's a simple procedure in which patients may undergo local anesthesia, in short time and in "day hospital" regimen. Collagen, used as an injectable bulking agent, is the gold standard for this surgical technique because of complete biocompatibility, no evidences of adverse immunogenic effects, foreign-body reaction, migration of injected material, and because of higher fluidity which allows the use of thin needles compared to Politef (polytetrafluoroethylene) where an injection device is requested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuch research has been conducted to determine which tissue (epithelium or stroma) in the prostate gives rise to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Considering that BPH displays two structural compartments, stromal and epithelial and that the periurethral and transitional regions are particularly involved, the immunohistochemical and regional evaluation of steroid receptors concentration, 5 alpha reductase, DHT and estrogen activity, may show important data on the role of these factors in BPH development. We started a immunohistochemical study on the epidermal growth factor (EGF) concentrations in the periurethral, central and pericapsular zones of BPH samples, considering the stroma-epithelium ratio; investigations are performed on BPH patients submitted to transvesical prostatectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the development of the obstructive symptomatology of benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), two components may be identified, mechanical and dynamic. In the mechanical component, the interaction of a stromal and a epithelial compartment determines prostatic mass growth. The dynamic component involves smooth muscle tone in the prostate and urethra.
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