THE EFFECT OF TEMPORARY CUTANEOUS DIVERSION ON ULTIMATE BLADDER FUNCTION

被引:40
作者
JAYANTHI, VR
MCLORIE, GA
KHOURY, AE
CHURCHILL, BM
机构
[1] Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ont.
关键词
URINARY DIVERSION; BLADDER;
D O I
10.1016/S0022-5347(01)67196-9
中图分类号
R5 [内科学]; R69 [泌尿科学(泌尿生殖系疾病)];
学科分类号
1002 [临床医学]; 100201 [内科学];
摘要
We evaluated the effect of temporary cutaneous diversion on bladder function in cases of various congenital uropathies. The clinical courses of patients who underwent reversal of vesicostomy or pyelostomy/ureterostomy in a 7-year period were reviewed. Indications for diversion included azotemia, massive hydronephrosis, high grade reflux and/or incomplete bladder emptying. Mean age at diversion was 15 weeks. Overall 75 cases were evaluated (posterior urethral valves in 31, neurogenic bladder in 16, reflux in 14, the syndrome of vertebral defects, anal atresia, tracheoesophageal fistula with esophageal atresia, and radial and renal anomalies in 8 and other in 6). Of 55 patients who underwent undiversion by direct closure only 2 required later augmentation for bladder/renal deterioration. Excluding the myelomeningocele patients on clean intermittent catheterization 45 of 46 who underwent direct closure were able to void spontaneously with acceptable post-void residuals. Urodynamics in 22 cases revealed normal bladder capacity at pressures below 30 cm. water in 19 (86%) after direct closure. We conclude that after a period of defunctionalization approximately 75% of children will have essentially normal bladder function. The frequency of bladder augmentation varied from 54% in patients with myelomeningocele to 14% in those with vesicoureteral reflux. This observation suggests that the need for bladder augmentation in the remaining patients is more related to the effect of the primary pathological condition on the detrusor rather than the diversion itself.
引用
收藏
页码:889 / 892
页数:4
相关论文
共 16 条
[1]
Allen, Vesicostomy for the temporary diversion of the urine in small children, J. Urol., 123, (1980)
[2]
Bruce, Gonzales, Cutaneous vesicostomy: a useful form of temporary diversion in children, J. Urol., 123, (1980)
[3]
Churchill, McLorie, Khoury, Merguerian, Houle, Emergency treatment and long-term follow-up of posterior urethral valves, Urol. Clin. N. Amer., 17, (1990)
[4]
Williot, McLorie, Gilmour, Churchill, Accuracy of bladder volume determinations in children using a suprapubic ultrasonic bi-planar technique, J. Urol., 141, (1989)
[5]
Bauer, Colodny, Retik, The management of vesicoureteral reflux in children with myelodysplasia, J. Urol., 128, (1982)
[6]
Alexander, Kay, Cloacal anomalies: role of vesicostomy, J. Ped. Surg., 29, (1994)
[7]
Cohen, Harbach, Kaplan, Cutaneous vesicostomy for temporary urinary diversion in infants with neurogenic bladder dysfunction, J. Urol., 119, (1978)
[8]
Krahn, Johnson, Cutaneous vesicostomy in the young child: indications and results, Urology, 41, (1993)
[9]
Mandell, Bauer, Colodny, Retik, Cutaneous vesicostomy in infancy, J. Urol., 126, (1981)
[10]
Rushton, Parrott, Woodard, Walther, The role of vesicostomy in the management of anterior urethral valves in neonates and infants, J. Urol., 138, (1987)