Abstract
ObjectiveTo address the issue of sexual function and fertility in PUV patients. Patients and methodsOf 47 patients (age > 18 years) treated for PUV in infancy 28 were contactable. They were sent a standard questionnaire requesting details on voiding dysfunction symptoms, and experience of erection, orgasm and ejaculation. ResultsOf the 28, 16 (mean age 24 years) returned the questionnaire. Voiding frequency ranged from 3 to 10 times per day (mean = 5). Two patients had occasional mild diurnal incontinence but none had symptoms of overactivity. Three patients had a weak urinary stream. Renal function was normal in 9, 4 had a glomerular filtration rate <80 ml/min/1.73 m2, and 3 had undergone renal transplant. Erections and orgasm were experienced by the 15 patients who responded to these questions, with 4 reporting mild or medium erectile dysfunction and 1, on dialysis, reporting slow ejaculation. Post-masturbation samples of semen and urine were collected from 6 patients. One had an alkaline pH, high percentage of immotile sperm and low sperm count. Another had a high concentration of abnormal forms, and seminal fluid was present in the urine of 3 patients. ConclusionsIn long-term follow-up, 44% of PUV patients develop chronic renal failure or end-stage renal disease, but bladder dysfunction symptoms are infrequent. Sexual function is mostly normal. Total semen counts and motility are compatible with paternity in most patients.
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