Objective: To introduce our experience in the treatment of arterial priapism by superselective embolization.
Methods: This study included 5 cases of perineal trauma-induced arterial erectile dysfunction treated in our departmentbetween February 2011 and May 2015, all failingpreviously to respond to 3 weeks of conservative treatment. The patients were aged 25-47 (mean 35) years, with the onset of arterial priapism at 2-5 days after trauma, and all subjected to physical examination, blood gas analysis, color Doppler ultrasonography of the corpora cavernosum, and IIEF-5 scoring. All the patients underwent superselective embolization, followed by local pressing and cold compression, and IIEF-5 scores were obtained again at 6 and 12 months postoperatively.
Results: All the patients had normal erectile functionbefore trauma, with a mean IIEF-5 scoreof 24.60 ± 0.55. Complete detumescenceor painless flaccidity of the penis was achieved in 1 case immediately after surgery and in the other 4 after 3-17 days of postoperative conservative treatment. None of the patients needed a second embolization and no relapse was found during a mean follow-upof 27.2 (13-48)months. The IIEF-5 scores obtained at 6 (24.00 ± 1.02) and 12 months (24.20 ± 0.82) were normal, with no statistically significant differencesfrom that before trauma.
Conclusions: Selective embolization is a safe and effective option for the treatment of arterial priapism. In case of no immediate painless flaccidity of the penis after surgery, conservative treatment can be extended rather than a second operation.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!