Volume 15, Issue 3 (May 2013) 15, 391–394; 10.1038/aja.2012.149
Penile prosthesis implantation and tunica albuginea incision without grafting in the treatment of Peyronie's disease with erectile dysfunction
Miroslav L Djordjevic and Vladimir Kojovic
School of Medicine, University of Belgrade, Belgrade 11000, Serbia
Correspondence: Dr ML Djordjevic, (djordjevic@uromiros.com)
Received 28 August 2012; Revised 3 November 2012; Accepted 29 November 2012 Advance online publication 25 February 2013
Abstract |
We evaluated penile prosthesis implantation with tunica albuginea-relaxing incisions without grafting in the treatment of Peyronie's disease associated with erectile dysfunction. Between April 2005 and June 2011, 62 patients underwent surgery due to severe Peyronie's disease associated with erectile dysfunction. Malleable and inflatable penile prostheses were inserted in 49 and 13 cases, respectively. Penile prostheses were inserted into the corpora cavernosa using the standard ventral approach. After lifting the neurovascular bundle, the tunica albuginea was incised and opened at the plaque region to correct the deformities and to lengthen the penis. Subsequently, the wide neurovascular bundle was replaced, and all incisions of the tunica albuginea were covered to prevent corporal grafting. In the median follow-up of 35 months (range 14–82 months), the penis was completely straightened in 59 (95%) patients. Numbness of the glans, which the patients found initially upsetting, decreased or disappeared spontaneously 3–6 months later. Penile prosthesis implantation with tunica albuginea incisions is a viable alternative in the treatment of Peyronie's disease because the extensive dissection of the neurovascular bundle allows a good approach to the plaque and provides excellent covering of the incised tunica albuginea without additional grafting.
Keywords: erectile dysfunction; neurovascular bundle; penile prosthesis; Peyronie's disease; tunica albuginea
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