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Open Journal of Urology, 2018, 8, 263-266

http://www.scirp.org/journal/oju
ISSN Online: 2160-5629
ISSN Print: 2160-5440

Safety and Efficacy of Circumcision Stapler in


the Treatment for Children with Phimosis
and Redundant Prepuce

Zhuocheng Jiang1,2, Hui Chen1*, Mingli Wu2, Ping Li2, Hong Li2, Mantao Jiang2, Xingtao Cai2

Department of Urology, Guangdong Provincial Work Injury Rehabilitation Hospital, Guangzhou, China
1

Department of Surgery, The Second People’s Hospital of Baiyun District, Guangzhou, China
2

How to cite this paper: Jiang, Z.C., Chen, Abstract


H., Wu, M.L., Li, P., Li, H., Jiang, M.T. and
Cai, X.T. (2018) Safety and Efficacy of Objective: To observe the clinical effect and safety of circumcision stapler in
Circumcision Stapler in the Treatment for children with phimosis and redundant prepuce. Methods: From July 2013 to
Children with Phimosis and Redundant
July 2017, 40 children were prospectively randomized and assigned to expe-
Prepuce. Open Journal of Urology, 8,
263-266.
riment group (circumcision stapler n = 20) or control group (conventional
https://doi.org/10.4236/oju.2018.89029 circumcision, n = 20). Outcomes were operation time, intraoperative blood
loss and postoperative complications. Results: There was significant differ-
Received: July 22, 2018
ence between the two groups for operation time (5.35 min vs 30.30 min, P <
Accepted: August 27, 2018
Published: August 30, 2018 0.05) and intraoperative blood loss (2.56 ml vs 10.40 ml, P < 0.05) respective-
ly. Conclusion: Circumcision staplers are superior to conventional circumci-
Copyright © 2018 by authors and sion for the advantages of shorter operation time and fewer blood losses.
Scientific Research Publishing Inc.
This work is licensed under the Creative
Commons Attribution International
Keywords
License (CC BY 4.0). Circumcision Stapler, Children, Phimosis, Redundant Prepuce
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Open Access

1. Introduction
Phimosis and redundant prepuce is the common diseases with incidence of 8%
in 4 - 7 years old boys [1]. The benefits of circumcision were highlighted, in-
cluding reduced risk of penile cancer and reduced risk of human immunodefi-
ciency virus infection [2]. The conventional circumcision as a golden standard
surgery is widely performed. Unfortunately, it still has such disadvantages in-
cluding adverse complications, inevitably suturing the incision, and cumber-
some surgical procedure. Clinically, the circumcision stapler is widely used
across the world for circumcision in adult and is associated with the advantages
of a short operating time, an obvious effect and few complications. Therefore,

DOI: 10.4236/oju.2018.89029 Aug. 30, 2018 263 Open Journal of Urology


Z. C. Jiang et al.

this trail was to assess the clinical effect and safety of circumcision stapler in
children with phimosis and redundant prepuce.

2. Materials and Methods


From July 2013 to July 2017, children with phimosis and redundant prepuces
were recruited and assigned to experiment group (circumcision stapler) or con-
trol group (conventional circumcision) in the department of surgery, the second
people’s hospital of Baiyun district. All patients’ parents agreed to the treatment
and signed informed consent before injection. The local ethics committees ap-
proved the study.
A single well trained and experienced urologist performed all procedures in
the operating room. Participants were cleaned with povidone iodine solution
and draped in a sterile fashion. Local anesthesia was administered to the dorsal
penile nerve and penile ring blocks using 3 mg/kg of 1% lidocaine. The conven-
tional circumcision procedure was standardized according to the standard pro-
cedure [2]. Circumcision stapler (Wuhu SNNDA Medical Treatment Appliance
Technology Co., LTD., Wuhu City, China) was performed as previously de-
scribed [3]. Circumcision stapler consists of an inner and an outer ring, a sili-
cone rubber gasket and a fastener [4]. Penile diameter is first measured to de-
termine appropriate ring size. After anesthetic administration the inner ring is
placed around the penis to the level of the coronal sulcus. The foreskin is care-
fully everted over the inner ring. The outer ring is placed over the inner ring to
sandwich the foreskin. The outer ring is tightened over the inner ring and the
excess foreskin is excised using suture scissors. Three to 5 slits are then made in
the foreskin on the underside of the ring using a scalpel blade. These slits are
needed to enable the skin to spread as healing occurs and allows cab expansion.
The ring is left in place for 1 to 2 weeks and removed at a follow up visit. The
outcome included operative time and intraoperative blood loss. Operative time
was measured from when the effects of the local anesthesia took hold until the
end of surgery. Intraoperative blood loss was estimated as follows: soaked 4 cm ×
4 cm gauze had an average carrying capacity of 2.85 ml blood.
t-Test was used to compare operative duration, blood loss volume between
experiment group and control group. A P value of 0.05 was considered statisti-
cally significant. Statistical analyses were performed with SPSS 13.0 software
(SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL).

3. Results
40 children completed the trail for final analysis.20 cases were in experiment group
with mean age 6.8 (5 - 11) years old, mean weigh 24.05 (22 - 41) kg; 20 cases were
in control group with mean age 6.6 (5 - 10) years old, mean weigh 23.68 (20 - 39)
kg. There was no significant difference for baseline data. Table 1 showed signif-
icant difference presented in operative time (5.35 min vs 30.30 min, P < 0.05)
and intraoperative blood loss(2.56 ml vs 10.40 ml, P < 0.05) between the

DOI: 10.4236/oju.2018.89029 264 Open Journal of Urology


Z. C. Jiang et al.

Table 1. Operative time and blood loss between the two groups.

Outcome Experiment group (n = 20) Control group (n = 20) P value

Operative time (min) 5.35 ± 1.38 30.30 ± 5.32 <0.05

blood loss (ml) 2.56 ± 0.38 10.40 ± 1.35 <0.05

two groups. No children in either group complained a major complication, such


as repeat operative procedure, infection or bleeding requiring admission.

4. Discussion
To treat redundant foreskin and phimosis with circumcision has been accepted
and applied by urologist around the world. Many studies have shown that male
circumcision shows potential benefits to the health of the man and his female
partner. Although traditional circumcision is the simplest surgery in urology,
and can be operated by interns under instruction, it also has drawbacks. It is
time and effort consuming, and may cause some bleeding.
Our present trail also demonstrated that circumcision staplers should be the
most advanced surgical procedure to treat redundant foreskin and phimosis in
children at the present time [5]. The reasons we analyzed were: 1) compared the
traditional procedure, the operative time is significant shorter in experiment
group (5.35 min vs 30.30 min, P < 0.05); 2) bleeding is minimal in experiment
group (2.56 ml vs 10.40 ml, P < 0.05).
In our experience, the learning curve circumcision staplers were short. How-
ever, some empirical points should be noted. Firstly, the preoperative evaluation
is very important. Concealed penis, webbed penis and hypospadias need to be
excluded. Secondary, appropriate model size should be selected. If the size is not
chosen properly, pain, notable edema, or difficult post-operative healing may
easily occur. Thirdly, the inner layer of the foreskin needs to be reserved proper-
ly. Too much inner layer can easily cause penile edema, whereas too little may
cause over short foreskin and pain during erection. Finally, the ring removal
time is also very important. According to published literature, the rings are typ-
ically removed on weeks 1 - 2 after operation [6]. In our study, the optimal time
was more than 2 weeks postoperation because more delayed ring removal lead to
the more complete healing and the more alleviated edema.

5. Conclusion
To sum up, circumcision staplers are superior to conventional circumcision for
the advantages of shorter operation time and fewer blood losses. Preoperative
evaluation, appropriate model size, appropriate inner layer of the foreskin and
appropriate ring removal time were very important for children preformed cir-
cumcision staplers.

Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

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Z. C. Jiang et al.

References
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DOI: 10.4236/oju.2018.89029 266 Open Journal of Urology

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