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1.
Ginecol. obstet. Méx ; 88(5): 334-341, ene. 2020. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1346196

ABSTRACT

Resumen: ANTECEDENTES: La incidencia de percretismo varía de 5-7% y de ésta, 78% corresponde a complicaciones relacionadas con la cirugía. Hasta la fecha existen pocos casos reportados de dehiscencia de cistorrafia posterior a la embolización de arterias uterinas. CASOS CLÍNICOS: Caso 1. Paciente de 34 años, con embarazo de 36 semanas y diagnóstico de acretismo placentario. El tratamiento consistió en embolización de arterias uterinas e histerectomía subtotal, con lesión vesical reparada sin complicaciones. Dos semanas después del alta hospitalaria acudió a consulta por pérdida de orina y fiebre (pielonefritis aguda); se estableció el diagnóstico de dehiscencia de cistorrafia por tomografía y cistografía retrógrada. Se realizó cateterización ureteral bilateral, laparotomía exploradora con traquelectomía, resección de los bordes necróticos vesicales y cistorrafia. Caso 2. Paciente de 30 años, con embarazo de 37 semanas y acretismo placentario; se aplicó tratamiento similar al caso 1, del que devino una lesión vesical reparada sin complicaciones. Durante la hospitalización permaneció en vigilancia por hemorragia obstétrica e infección urinaria con mala evolución; dos semanas después tuvo pérdida de orina, por lo que se efectuaron: cistoscopia, tomografía y cistografía retrógrada. Se estableció el diagnóstico de dehiscencia de cistorrafia. Durante la cirugía se localizó el defecto por cistoscopia e histeroscopia, se cateterizaron los uréteres de ambos lados; posteriormente, mediante acceso laparoscópico, se resecaron los bordes vesicales necróticos y se complementó con cistorrafia. Ambas pacientes evolucionaron sin complicaciones. CONCLUSIÓN: La dehiscencia de cistorrafia en pacientes con embolización de arterias uterinas es una complicación excepcional. La sospecha diagnóstica y el tratamiento oportunos, con resección de los bordes necróticos y cistorrafia, se asocian con mayor tasa de éxito.


Abstract: BACKGROUND: The incidence of percretism is 5-7% with 78% of complications associated with surgical management. There are few reported cases of cystorraphy dehiscence after uterine arteries embolization. CLINICAL CASES: Case 1. A 34 years old patient with a pregnancy of 36 5/7 weeks and acretism; she was treated with uterine artery embolization plus subtotal hysterectomy with bladder injury repaired without complications. She was discharged, and in 2 weeks she consulted for vaginal urine loss and fever (acute pyelonephritis); cystorraphy dehiscence was diagnosed with support of tomography and retrograde cystography. Bilateral ureteral catheterization, laparotomy with trachelectomy plus resection of bladder necrotic edges and cystorraphy were performed. Case 2. A 30 years old patient with a pregnancy of 37 5/7 weeks and acretism; equal treatment of acretism was given with bladder injury repaired without complications. She was hospitalized in surveillance for obstetric haemorrhage and urinary infection with torpid evolution; she referred vaginal urine loss at 2 weeks, so cystoscopy, tomography and retrograde cystography were performed which diagnosed cystorraphy dehiscence. In surgery the bladder defect was located by cystoscopy and hysteroscopy and bilateral ureters were catheterized; subsequently, by laparoscopic approach necrotic bladder edges were resected and cystorraphy was performed. Both patients without complications and with successful postoperative evolution. CONCLUSION: Cystorraphy dehiscence in embolized patients is extremely rare; however, it should be considered as a possible complication. Diagnostic suspicion and timely management with resection of necrosis and new cystorraphy, achieve greater success.

2.
Ginecol Obstet Mex ; 76(11): 635-42, 2008 Nov.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19065814

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: One difficulty that a woman with urinary incontinence faces up is quality and control of her sexual life, the more it is complicated the more it affects her in different ways. These complications require, as well as medical treatment, evaluation and special psychological intervention to integrally recovery. OBJECTIVE: To know frequency and origin of sexual disturbances in women with urinary incontinence. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Demographical, confirmatory, descriptive, transversal, retrospective with non-experimental design study. Seventy patients, ranging from 21 to 59-years-old, with diagnosis of urinary incontinence were selected. Three groups were conformed: Group 1, patients with sexual dysfunction before the manifestation of urinary incontinence; Group 2, patients with sexual dysfunction due to urinary incontinence, and Group 3, patients with no sexual problems neither before nor after the urinary incontinence problem. Codified Clinical History Form on Female Sexuality was used to classify patients; diagnosis was performed with the DSM-IV-TR. RESULTS: Forty-six percent of patients had sexual dysfunctions (mainly dysrythmia and orgasmic disorder), 37% showed sexual disorder associated with urinary incontinence (dyspaurenia and hypoactive sexual desire), and 17% had no sexual problems. CONCLUSIONS: As proper appraisal will define intervention strategies, patients with medical sexual problems must be evaluated by a psychology to establish diagnose and for adequate approach.


Subject(s)
Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/diagnosis , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/therapy , Urinary Incontinence/complications , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/etiology , Young Adult
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