2. ā¢ An intimate knowledge of urethral and genital skin anatomy is essential
for successful surgical management of male urethral strictures, fistulas
and other anomalies
3. ā¢ The urethra is an epithelialized tube for the passage of
urine and semen that extends from the distal bladder
neck to the meatus.
ā¢ The āanteriorā urethra extends from the meatus
to the proximal bulbar urethra and is entirely
surrounded by the corpus spongiosum.
ā¢ The āposteriorā urethra extends from the distal
bladder neck to the distal membranous urethra.
4. ā¢ The bladder neck:
ā¢ It is surrounded by the fibers of the detrusor muscle and
variably by any intravesical extension of the prostate.
ā¢The transitional epithelium of the bladder neck is
continuous with the trigone and bladder.
ā¢Bladder neck stenosis not stricture.
5. ā¢ The prostatic urethra:
ā¢ The prostatic urethra is 3ā4 cm in length, is formed at the
bladder neck, turns anteriorly 35 degrees (the urethral angle),
and exits the prostate at the apex.
ā¢ The main prostatic ducts from the transition zone drain into
posterolateral recesses of the urethra at a point just proximal to
the urethral angle
ā¢ Beyond the angle, ejaculatory ducts and ducts from the central
prostatic zone empty at the posterior urethral protuberance
known as the verumontanum.
ā¢ At the apex of the verumontanum, the slit-like orifice of the
prostatic utricle, a mullerian remnant, may be found.
ā¢ It is lined by transitional epithelium.
6. ā¢ The membranous urethra:
ā¢ It extends from the proximal bulbar urethra to the distal
verumontanum.
ā¢ It is 2 to 2.5 cm in length
ā¢ It is surrounded by both the smooth muscle external sphincter and the
rhabdosphincter.
ā¢ It is lined with stratified/pseudostratified columnar epithelium .
7. ā¢ The bulbar urethra:
ā¢ It is 3 to 4 cm in length.
ā¢ It extends in the root of the penis within the
bulb of the corpus spongiosum from the distal
margin of the membranous urethra to the
penile urethra .
ā¢ The ducts of Cowperās (bulbourethral) glands
open into the posterior aspect of the bulbous
urethra.
ā¢ It is lined with stratified/pseudostratified
columnar epithelium
8. ā¢ The penile urethra:
ā¢ The penile urethra is of about 15 cm in length.
ā¢ the penile urethra is lined with stratified/ pseudostratified
epithelium with simple squamous epithelium distally.
ā¢ It is completely surrounded by the corpus spongiosum and
maintains a constant lumen size, generally centred in the
corpus spongiosum
ā¢ It extends from the meatus to the distal edge of the
bulbospongiosus muscle.
9. ā¢ The fossa navicularis:
ā¢ It is the distal portion of the penile urethra located within the
erectile tissue of the glans penis proximal to the meatus.
ā¢ The urethral meatus:
ā¢ It is a slit-like opening located at the tip of the glans penis
slightly ventrally, with its long axis oriented vertically.
ā¢The fossa navicularis is lined with stratified squamous
epithelium.
10. ā¢ Urinary continence:
ā¢ Urinary continence in men results from sphincter mechanisms
located along the urethra from the bladder neck to the distal
membranous urethra.
ā¢ Continence after anastomotic urethroplasty for post-traumatic
posterior urethral stenosis is maintained solely by the proximal
urethral continence mechanism.
11. Blood Supply of the Urethra
ā¢ Arterial Blood Supply:
ā¢ A detailed knowledge of the arterial blood supply of the corpus spongiosum is
essential to perform successful urethral surgery
ā¢ The key feature and the reason that the urethra can be mobilized extensively,
divided, and then sewn back together is that it has a unique dual blood supply.
ā¢ The distal and proximal ends of the urethra are supplied by two arterial
blood supplies, the proximal urethra in an antegrade fashion, and the distal
urethra in a retrograde fashion.
12. ā¢ The internal pudendal artery branches into the perineal artery and
posterior scrotal artery and then continues distally as the common
penile artery.
13. ā¢ The common penile artery travels along the medial margin of the
inferior pubic ramus and as it nears the bulbar urethra, divides into
three terminal branches:
1) the bulbourethral artery, which penetrates Buckās fascia to enter the
bulbospongiosus, oriented almost parallel to the path of the membranous urethra.
2) the dorsal artery, which travels dorsally along the penis giving off circumflex
branches (the circumflex cavernosal arteries) to the corpus spongiosum with its
terminal branches in the glans penis.
3) the cavernosal artery as the terminal branch of the penile artery, which enters
the corpus cavernosum and runs the length of the penile shaft.
14. ā¢ The dorsal artery of the penis penetrates into the spongy tissue of the glans
penis. From the glans penis, the blood flows in a retrograde way into the
corpus spongiosum.
ā¢ The corpus spongiosum thus has dual blood supply, proximally by the bulbar
and circumflex cavernosal arteries, and distally by penetration of the dorsal
penile artery
15. ā¢ After division of the bulbar arteries, blood
supply of the proximal bulbar urethra
depends on the retrograde blood supply
along its spongy tissue.
ā¢ necrosis of the proximal mobilized urethra
can result from sever hypospadias,
incidental spongiofibrosis, or division of
distal collateral vessels by excessive
mobilization of the penile urethra.
ā¢ So, anastomotic urethroplasty in those
patients can result is proximal urethral
ischemia and re-stricture.
16. ā¢ Urethral ischemic necrosis or ischemia :
ā¢ It refers to recurrence of stricture of the anterior and proximal urethra after
Excision and primary anastomosis (EPA) urethral surgery. Such ischemic
strictures are particularly difficult to manage because often they are very long
and either have a very narrow caliber or completely obliterate the anterior
urethra.
17. ā¢ Venous Drainage:
ā¢ The venous drainage of the corpus spongiosum is predominantly the
venous drainage of the glans panis and the other deep structures,
namely via the periurethral veins, circumflex veins and the deep and
superficial dorsal veins.
18. ā¢ lymphatic Drainage:
ā¢ The lymphatic vessels of the membranous and prostatic urethra
pass to the internal iliac nodes, although a few may enter the
external nodes.
ā¢ The lymphatic vessels coming from the anterior urethra drain with
the glans penis into the deep inguinal nodes. Some of the vessels
may enter the superficial inguinal nodes and may pass through the
inguinal canal to reach the external iliac nodes
19. ā¢ Nerve supply:
ā¢ Urethral innervation is mainly by the dorsal nerve of the penis.
Branches of the perineal nerve can supply the periurethral area in
some men
20. ā¢ Penile Skin Arterial Blood Supply:
The blood supply to the skin of the penis and the anterior scrotal wall
are from the external pudendal arteries.
21. ā¢ the superficial external pudendal artery cross the spermatic cord
and enter the base of the penis as posterolateral and anterolateral
axial branches.
ā¢ Together with interconnecting, perforating branches, they form an
arterial network within the Dartos fascia.
22. ā¢ At the subcorona, the axial penile arteries continue into the foreskin
as preputial arteries, as well as send perforating arterial branches
which pierce Buckās fascia to anastomose with the dorsal arteries.
23.
24. ā¢ Genital Flap Selection:
ā¢ Genital skin island flaps are versatile for anterior urethral
reconstruction.
ā¢ knowledge of the anatomy and specific tissue characteristics and
adherence to the surgical principles of tissue transfer can result in
long term success.
25. ā¢ Genital Flap Selection:
ā¢ The specific skin island flap that is selected should be based on specific physical
characteristics:
1) Skin for harvest is from an area of natural skin redundancy.
2) The skin at the donor site is elastic or redundant enough to be closed.
3) The skin island is thin and hairless.
4) The skin island is long and wide enough to bridge the entire stricture.
5) The vascular pedicle to the skin island is reliable and long.