Abstract
To assess the outcome of surgery for urethral failure. Patients undergoing lower urinary tract reconstruction are recorded prospectively by protocol. Thirty-four are presented whose urethra had failed as a conduit; in 23 the urethra was incontinent and in 11 it was spastic causing chronic retention. The incontinent patients had failed a variety of reconstructions, in five including insertion of an artificial sphincter. Those with chronic retention were unable to self-catheterize the urethra. A continent supra-public diversion using the Mitrofanoff principle was performed. In two patients a new technique was used in which a detrusor tube formed the continent conduit. Ninety-four per cent of patients were continent. Two patients voided to completion, the remainder emptied by self-catheterization. Five minor revisions were required to allow easy catheterization. There was one death. The complication rate was 17%. This type of reconstruction is preferable to the formation of an ileal conduit in this difficult group of patients.
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