Publication: Isolated penile torsion in newborns
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Advisor
Publication Date
2015
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
introduction: We reported on the incidence of isolated penile torsion among our healthy children and our approach to this anomaly. Methods: Between 2011 and 2014, newborn babies with penile torsion were classified according to the angle of torsion. Surgical correction (penile degloving and reattachment for moderate cases and dorsal dartos flap technique in case of resistance) after 6 months was advised to the babies with rotations more than 45 degrees. Results: among 1000 newborn babies, 200 isolated penile torsions were found, and among these, 43 had torsions more than 45 degrees, and 4 of these had angles greater than 90 degrees. the mean angle of the rotations was found 30.45 degrees (median: 20 degrees). in total, 8 children with 60 degrees torsions were previously circumcised. Surgery was performed on 19 patients, with a mean patient age of 12 +/- 2 months. of these 19, 13 babies were corrected with degloving and reattachment. This technique was not enough on the remaining 6 patients; therefore, derotational dorsal dartos flap was added to correct the torsion. after a mean of 15.6 +/- 9.8 months, residual penile rotation, less than 15 degrees, was found only in 2 children. Conclusion: the incidence of isolated penile torsion is 20% in newborns. However, rotation more than 45 degrees angles are seen in 4.3% of male babies. Correction is not necessary in mild degrees, and penile degloving with reattachment is enough in most cases. If the initial correction is insufficient, dorsal dartos flap rotation is easy and effective. Prior circumcision neither disturbs the operative procedure nor affects the outcomes.
Description
Source:
Cuaj-Canadian Urological Association Journal
Publisher:
Canadian Urological association
Keywords:
Subject
Urology, Nephrology