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Bowel vaginoplasty in children and young women: an institutional experience with 55 patients. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on bowel vaginoplasty as a reconstruction method for patients with absent vaginas due to congenital or acquired conditions.
  • The procedure was performed on 55 patients over a decade, using various bowel segments, primarily the sigmoid colon.
  • Results indicated positive outcomes, including regular menstrual flow for most patients and satisfactory sexual function for some, with a few complications such as neovaginal mucosal prolapse and stenosis.

Article Abstract

Introduction And Hypothesis: Absence of a vagina owing to congenital Mullerian defects or other acquired causes requires reconstruction of the female genital passage. We present our experience using various bowel segments.

Methods: Bowel vaginoplasty was performed in 55 patients from January 2004 through May 2014 for cervicovaginal atresia (20), Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome (20), distal vaginal atresia (8), cloaca (2), cervical atresia (1), complex urogenital sinus (1), transverse vaginal septum (1), rhabdomyosarcoma of the vagina (1), and traumatic stricture of the vagina (1). The bowel segments used were sigmoid (50), ileum (2), anorectovestibular fistula ( 2), and loop rectovaginoplasty (1).

Results: Thirty-nine patients who had the proximal vagina or uterus anastomosed to the bowel segment reported regular menstrual flows. Three patients are sexually active with satisfactory coital function. None of our patients developed pyometra. Five patients had neovaginal mucosal prolapse. Two patients had severe stenosis requiring excision of the neovagina. Seven patients had mild stenosis requiring dilatations in 6 patients and V-Y meatoplasty for 1 patient. One patient had a descending colon anastomotic leak requiring a diversion ileostomy.

Conclusions: Genital reconstruction with bowel vaginoplasty is a highly skilled operation that provides a durable and lubricated replacement of the vagina with good outcomes. Utero-coloneovaginoplasty is a safe procedure preserving the menstrual flow in patients with a functional uterine fundus.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00192-015-2728-3DOI Listing

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