Penis
Appearance
Phimosis
[edit | edit source]- Note that physiological phimosis is present until 6yo in some cases - don't stress until then
- Inability to retract the foreskin without fissuring it, due to scarring of the prepuce
- May result in ballooning of the foreskin during micturition and can result in balanoposthitis
- Can rarely cause urinary obstruction if the aperture in the prepuce is extremely tight
- In adults, can occur secondary to inflammation (balanitis, posthitis, balanitis xerotica obliterans). As a result, difficult to keep the penis clean, and there may be recurrent balanitis.
- Treatment
- When the foreskin is only mildly scarred, then preputioplasty is possible
- Circumcision in all other cases
- In emergencies due to urinary obstruction, it is possible to divide the foreskin dorsally under local anaesthetic - 'dorsal slit'
- When the foreskin is only mildly scarred, then preputioplasty is possible
Frenulum breve
[edit | edit source]- Short frenulum causes pain when foreskin is retracted
- Treat with frenuloplasty - lengthen it
Paraphimosis
[edit | edit source]- Inability to reduce the foreskin once it has been withdrawn proximal to the glans
- Icebags, gentle manual compression, injection of a solution of hyaluronidase in normal saline
- Circumcision if careful manipulation fails
- Dorsal slit may be enough in an emergency
Posthitis
[edit | edit source]- Inflammation of the prepuce
Balanitis
[edit | edit source]- Inflammation of the glans
Balanoposthitis
[edit | edit source]- Treat with broad-spectrum antibiotics and local hygiene measures
- If associated phimosis, may need circumcision
Fracture
[edit | edit source]- Rupture of tunica albuginea with immediate extravasation of blood from within the penis
- Typically a loud cracking sound with immediate loss of the erection
- Rapid bruising in penis and scrotum
- Generally needs early exploration and repair
Strangulation
[edit | edit source]- Usually with a ring
- Just need to remove the constricting item with a ring cutter or hacksaw
- Aspirating corpora cavernosa may help temporarily
Erectile dysfunction
[edit | edit source]- Commonest cause is vascular disease
- a/w diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, smoking
- Treatment generally involves sildenafil
Priapism
[edit | edit source]- Most commonly side effect of medication, but also seen with intra-cavernosal injections, hypercoagulable blood disorders such as sickle cell and leukaemia, and very rarely malignant disease in corpora cavernosa or pelvis
- First aspirate the blood from corpora cavernosa
- Then try intra-cavernosal injection of phenylephrine
- Then it may be necessary to create a shunt between corpus cavernosum and either the glans penis or the corpus spongiosum
- Can also develop as painless (non-ischaemic priapism) after trauma, which is not as much of an emergency - often needs selective arterial embolisation
Carcinoma of the penis
[edit | edit source]- Risk factors
- HPV 16 and 18
- BXO
- Smoking
- Phimosis
- Chronic balanoposthitis
- Protective - circumcision soon after birth confers immunity
- Pathophysiology
- Typically SCC arising in the skin of the glans penis or the prepuce
- Can be either flat and infiltrating (starts as PeIN or leucoplakia) or warty (starts as papilloma)
- Penile intraepithelial neoplasia - red cutaneous patch on penis
- Known as erythroplasia of Queyrat when it occurs on the glans
- Known as Bowe's disease on the shaft
- There are several benign causes of red patches, so biopsy is indicated
- Treatment - topical 5-FU cream, CO2 laser ablation, or surgical excision
- Staging
- T1 - confined to skin
- T2 - corpus cavernosum/spongiosum
- T3 - urethra
- T4 - adjacent structures
- N1 - inguinal nodes (50% have nodes at presentation, which can be infective rather than malignant)
- N3 - iliac nodes
- Only rarely metastasises
- Management:
- Treatment of tumour
- Surgical excision - often penile preserving surgery. If it affects the glans, glansectomy will be required. More advanced tumours require partial penectomy.
- Treatment of inguinal lymphadenopathy
- Delay until 3/52 after treatment of primary tumour - if enlargement is caused by infection, then it will show signs of improvement by then
- USS FNA will confirm diagnosis
- Requires block dissection of both groins if positive
- If no clinical nodes, needs SLNB
- Treatment of tumour
- Prognosis
- 5 year survival >80% if confined to penis
- 40% if node positive