Int J Gynaecol Obstet
April 2011
Objective: To compare the incidence of complications associated with the use of retropubic tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) and transobturator tension-free vaginal tape (TVT-O) for the management of stress urinary incontinence (SUI).
Methods: In a cross-sectional study, 1081 patients were treated for SUI via mid-urethral slings, and the outcomes of those treated via TVT and those treated via TVT-O were compared. Patients who suffered from recurrent or mixed urinary incontinence were excluded.
Purpose Of Review: Urethrovaginal fistulae are a rare condition. It is a conceptual mistake to consider urethrovaginal fistulae to be synonymous with vesicovaginal fistulae. Urethrovaginal fistulae are a different entity requiring special attention and treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Pelvic radiation used for the treatment of malignant diseases is the primary cause of delayed vesicovaginal fistula.
Objective: We consider the Martius labial fatty flap technique and the Latzko upper colpocleisis as important tools for the urologist dealing with patients suffering from radiation-induced vesicovaginal fistula (RVVF).
Design, Setting, And Participants: In our clinic, 216 patients with RVVF underwent surgical treatment.
Objectives: Despite the apparent similarity, urethrovaginal fistulas (UVFs) are not identical to vesicovaginal defects. Obstetric trauma and vaginal surgery are the causes of a majority of urethrovaginal fistulas.
Methods: Careful preoperative evaluation is essential for identifying small UVFs or associated vesicovaginal fistulas and includes physical examination, cystourethroscopy, intravenous pyelography, ultrasonography, and urinalysis, but sometimes the final surgical plan can only be decided on after the patient is examined under anaesthesia with a metal sound in the urethra.