Abstract
Serial gross and histopathologic examinations of the prostate following transurethral laser prostatectomy in the canine model demonstrated an immediate well-demarcated sphere of thermal necrosis measuring 2.7 cm in diameter, which, within 24 hours, had begun liquefaction and was showing multiple areas of cavitation. By the end of the 1st week, the areas of cavitation had coalesced to form a central cavity lined by a narrow layer of necrotic tissue clinging to the thin surviving peripheral belt of prostatic glandular parenchyma. At 3 weeks, the bluish-black discoloration resulting from breakdown of blood in the necrotic tissue had subsided, leaving masses of coagulonecrotic tissue within the central cavity. Within 5 weeks, the ectatic central cavity was lined by transitional epithelium. These postmortem pathologic observations confirm our surgical and clinical impressions of being able to satisfactorily perform an effective transurethral prostatectomy using neodymium:YAG (Nd:YAG) laser photoirradiation.
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