Abstract

We report on the retrospective analysis of 61 traumatic lesions of the posterior urethra in a fractured pelvis. In collaboration with the orthopedic surgeons, 44 cases could be classified with regard to the nature and mechanism of the pelvic fracture. No direct relationship between the structural integrity of the dorsal ring segment and the urological pathology could be established. However, the mechanism of injury in 35/44 cases with pelvic girdle injuries and urethral pathology appears to be a predominantly lateral compression force. Ten of the 44 patients received a surgical stabilization of the fracture and open splinting of the urethra at the same time. An infection in the area of surgery developed in only one of these patients; however, this cleared up completely under antibiotic therapy and closed suction irrigation. The primarily conservative treatment of urethral lesions (27/61) is compared with primary open splinting or reanastomosis (34/61), which we prefer, with regard to the number of reoperations and late results. The joint conclusion of urologists and orthopedic surgeons concerns a primary simultaneous surgical treatment both of the urethral lesion and the pelvic fracture.

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