Department of Urology, Temple University Hospital, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
BJU Int. 2012 Jun;109(11):1704-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1464-410X.2011.10631.x. Epub 2011 Oct 12.
Study Type - Therapy (case series) Level of Evidence 4 What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Penetrating trauma to the scrotum often requires operative intervention, with testicular salvage only possible when enough testicular tissue can be re-approximated in the traumatic setting. The present report represents the largest series of gunshot wound trauma to the scrotum in the literature. Further, it validates recommendations of the European Association of Urology guidelines on urological trauma that advocate operative intervention due to minimal rates of patient morbidity and the inherent limitations of scrotal ultrasonography in discerning testicular compromise.
To report our 20-year experience of gunshot wounds (GSWs) to the scrotum and outline the management of this traumatic injury.
We queried our institutional database for patients presenting with GSWs to the scrotum between 1985 and 2006. All patients underwent the standard trauma evaluation upon presentation, including physical examination of the external genitalia. Management was dictated by the presence or absence of a penetrating injury to the scrotum and associated traumatic injuries. Nonoperative and operative management of traumatic injury to the scrotum were used. Testicular salvage was performed when anatomically feasible. If testicular salvage was not feasible, an orchiectomy was performed.
Scrotal exploration was performed in 91 (94%) patients while six (6%) patients were treated nonoperatively. Testicular injury was found in 44 (48%) patients undergoing exploration, six (7%) of whom had bilateral testicular injuries, which gave a total of 50 injured testicles. Of the injured testicles, 24 (48%) could not be salvaged and required orchiectomy, while 26 (52%) were debrided and repaired. The most common associated genitourinary (GU) injuries were to the corpora cavernosum (n= 20 [21%]) and urethra (n= 10 [10%]). Soft tissue injury of the extremities occurred in 54 patients (56%), representing the most common non-GU-associated injury. Postoperative complications occurred infrequently: one patient (1%) returned for abscess drainage and one (1%) for haematoma evacuation.
The present report confirms that any patient with a penetrating injury to the scrotum should undergo immediate scrotal exploration. A low clinical suspicion for performing additional studies to rule out associated urethral and/or penile injury is clinically warranted. Testicular loss occurs in ≈50% of injured testicles.
报告我们 20 年来治疗阴囊枪伤(GSWs)的经验,并概述这种创伤的治疗方法。
我们在 1985 年至 2006 年间检索了我们机构的数据库,以寻找阴囊 GSWs 患者。所有患者在就诊时均接受了标准的创伤评估,包括外生殖器的体格检查。治疗方法取决于阴囊是否有穿透性损伤以及是否存在相关的创伤性损伤。使用非手术和手术治疗阴囊创伤。如果解剖学上可行,则进行睾丸保留。如果睾丸保留不可行,则进行睾丸切除术。
91 例(94%)患者进行了阴囊探查,6 例(6%)患者接受了非手术治疗。在接受探查的 44 例患者中发现了睾丸损伤,其中 6 例(7%)为双侧睾丸损伤,总共有 50 个受伤睾丸。在受伤的睾丸中,24 个(48%)无法保留,需要进行睾丸切除术,而 26 个(52%)进行了清创和修复。最常见的相关泌尿生殖系统(GU)损伤是阴茎海绵体(n=20 [21%])和尿道(n=10 [10%])。54 例患者(56%)发生四肢软组织损伤,是最常见的非 GU 相关损伤。术后并发症发生率较低:1 例(1%)患者返回行脓肿引流,1 例(1%)患者返回行血肿清除。
本报告证实,任何阴囊穿透性损伤的患者都应立即进行阴囊探查。临床上有理由高度怀疑是否需要进行额外的检查以排除相关的尿道和/或阴茎损伤。约有 50%的受伤睾丸会发生睾丸丧失。