Purpose: Vitamin B12 deficiency is a feared complication of enterocystoplasty but it has never been demonstrated in pediatric patients who have undergone ileal enterocystoplasty. We reviewed our series of more than 500 bladder augmentations in an attempt to define the timing and risk of vitamin B12 deficiency in pediatric patients after bladder augmentation.
Materials And Methods: From October 2004 to present we obtained serum B12 values in patients who had undergone bladder augmentation at our institution. We looked at patients who had undergone ileal enterocystoplasty and who were 18 years or younger at the time of augmentation. Any B12 value that was obtained while on any form of B12 supplementation was excluded. These criteria resulted in 79 patients with 105 B12 values. B12 values of 200 pg/ml or less were considered "low," and values between 201 and 300 pg/ml were considered "low-normal."
Results: There was a statistically significant correlation between followup time and serum B12 (p = 0.0001). The probability of low B12 increased as followup time increased (p = 0.007), as did the probability of low-normal B12 (p = 0.005). Starting at 7 years postoperatively 6 of 29 patients (21%) had low B12 values, while 12 of 29 (41%) had low-normal values.
Conclusions: Pediatric patients who have undergone ileal enterocystoplasty are at risk for development of vitamin B12 deficiency. These patients are at the highest risk beginning at 7 years postoperatively, and the risk increases with time. We recommend an annual serum B12 value in children beginning at 5 years following bladder augmentation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.juro.2007.11.089 | DOI Listing |
J Pediatr Surg
November 2024
Department of Paediatric Surgery and Urology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Queensway, Birmingham B4 6NH, UK. Electronic address:
Introduction: Bladder augmentation in the UK has been largely by enterocystoplasty or ureterocystoplasty (UC). Ileocystoplasty can be simple patch placement (SPP), or formation of an ileal cup (IC). Urothelium is the "right" mucosa, whereas intestinal mucosa exhibits absorption, mucus production, malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Urol
August 2024
Department of Urology, CACAU-NUPEP, São Paulo, Brazil. Electronic address:
Introduction: The Macedo ileal catheterizable channel was published in 2000 and consists of an enterocystoplasty with a catheterizable channel that precludes the need of the appendix for the efferent channel. After 25 years of experience with this technique, we decided to review our experience in a select subgroup of cases performed and followed exclusively by the author in a non-teaching hospital facility after the latest modifications of the procedure.
Materials And Methods: Since 2008, we have refined our technique with the following modifications: small skin transverse incision instead of longitudinal one, with a semicircular flap for further stoma creation in the midline and importantly the scissors maneuver.
PNAS Nexus
February 2024
Division of Pediatric Urology, Department of Surgery, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
To date, there are no efficacious translational solutions for end-stage urinary bladder dysfunction. Current surgical strategies, including urinary diversion and bladder augmentation enterocystoplasty (BAE), utilize autologous intestinal segments (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUrology
August 2023
Department of Urology, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN.
Objective: To investigate the safety, efficacy, and surgical approach of percutaneous bladder calculi removal in adult patients with prior lower urinary tract reconstruction utilizing bowel using a single-institution database.
Methods: Twenty patients with prior history of lower urinary tract reconstruction (continent cutaneous urinary reservoir, augmentation enterocystoplasty with catheterizable channel, or ileal neobladder) who underwent percutaneous cystolitholapaxy from 2014 to 2020 were identified from an IRB-approved database. Analysis of patient demographics, operative details, stone composition, stone-free rates, recurrence, and associated complications was performed.
J Pediatr Urol
June 2023
Boston Children's Hospital, Department of Urology, Boston, MA 02115, USA. Electronic address:
Purpose: False-positive urine pregnancy screening tests (UPST) have been reported among patients with bowel-containing urinary reconstruction (BCUR). However, the true frequency of such inaccurate results, which have been attributed to urinary mucous or other proteins interfering with or mimicking the binding of beta-HCG in the assay, is unknown in this population. We sought to determine the incidence of false-positive pregnancy screening tests among this patient population at our institution.
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