Introduction: A penile fracture is the traumatic rupture of the turnica albuginea of one of both cavernous bodies of an erect penis. It is a urologic emergency in young adults. The objective of our study is to determi...Introduction: A penile fracture is the traumatic rupture of the turnica albuginea of one of both cavernous bodies of an erect penis. It is a urologic emergency in young adults. The objective of our study is to determine the epidemiologic, clinical, and therapeutic aspects and evaluate the complications at the Yaounde Central Hospital (YCH). Methodology: It was a cross-sectional retrospective and descriptive study, carried out for a period of five years, from 2015 to 2020, followed by a prospective phase for a period of 1 year, from December 2020 to 2021 at the Urology Unit of Yaounde Central Hospital. Results: Our study involved 23 patients. The mean age was 34 ± 4 years with extremes of 23 - 65 years. Married men were the most involved, with 16 cases (69.6%). The majority of patients presented for consultation within the first 6 hours (60.9%). The mean delay time before the consultation was 5 [3 - 24] hours, with extreme values of 1 - 72 hours. Sitting position during sexual intercourse was mainly found (56.5% of cases), while alcohol consumption was the main environmental risk factor found (47.8% of cases). Penile pain (100.0%) and deformation of the penile shaft (91.3%) were the most encountered symptom during admission. The frequency of cavernosa involement was 87.0%. The injury was partial in the majority of cases (95.0%), involving both corpus cavernosa (55.0%) and mostly on the right (60.0%). The mean management delay was 5 hours standard deviation [5 - 7], with extremes of 2 - 48 hours. The intra-cavernous hematoma was the essential per-operative finding in all the operated cases (100.0%). Most patients resumed sexual intercourse 2 - 3 months following management (65.3% of cases). After one year of treatment, 78.3% of patients declared satisfactory sexual activity. Conclusion: Penile fracture is an anthological emergency in young adults. The management is essentially surgical. Functional prognosis depends on the promptitude of surgical intervention.展开更多
文摘Introduction: A penile fracture is the traumatic rupture of the turnica albuginea of one of both cavernous bodies of an erect penis. It is a urologic emergency in young adults. The objective of our study is to determine the epidemiologic, clinical, and therapeutic aspects and evaluate the complications at the Yaounde Central Hospital (YCH). Methodology: It was a cross-sectional retrospective and descriptive study, carried out for a period of five years, from 2015 to 2020, followed by a prospective phase for a period of 1 year, from December 2020 to 2021 at the Urology Unit of Yaounde Central Hospital. Results: Our study involved 23 patients. The mean age was 34 ± 4 years with extremes of 23 - 65 years. Married men were the most involved, with 16 cases (69.6%). The majority of patients presented for consultation within the first 6 hours (60.9%). The mean delay time before the consultation was 5 [3 - 24] hours, with extreme values of 1 - 72 hours. Sitting position during sexual intercourse was mainly found (56.5% of cases), while alcohol consumption was the main environmental risk factor found (47.8% of cases). Penile pain (100.0%) and deformation of the penile shaft (91.3%) were the most encountered symptom during admission. The frequency of cavernosa involement was 87.0%. The injury was partial in the majority of cases (95.0%), involving both corpus cavernosa (55.0%) and mostly on the right (60.0%). The mean management delay was 5 hours standard deviation [5 - 7], with extremes of 2 - 48 hours. The intra-cavernous hematoma was the essential per-operative finding in all the operated cases (100.0%). Most patients resumed sexual intercourse 2 - 3 months following management (65.3% of cases). After one year of treatment, 78.3% of patients declared satisfactory sexual activity. Conclusion: Penile fracture is an anthological emergency in young adults. The management is essentially surgical. Functional prognosis depends on the promptitude of surgical intervention.