UROLOGY
UROLOGY
UROLOGY
Temperature rise
■ Inflammatory and cancerous diseases of the organs of the urinary
system.
■ High temperature(38-40°C) occurs: Acute pyelonephritis,
paranephritis, acute prostatitis, acute orchiepididymitis.
■ Urinary tract obstruction, vesicoureteral reflux in infected urine
conditions cause a sudden chill and rise in temperature.
■ The subfebrile temperature is associated with urinary tract
tuberculosis, chronic orchiepididymitis, a kidney tumor.
Genital symptoms
■ Urethrorrhagia
■ refers to urethral bleeding in the absence of urine, associated with
urethral cancer, traumatic injury.
■ Prostatorrhea
■ Is the emission of prostatic secretions during straining associated
with urination or defecation. Occurs in chronic bacterial prostatitis or
during prolonged restraint from sex life.
■ Spermatorrhoea
■ abnormally frequent and involuntary nonorgasmic emission of
semen, during severe spinal cord injury.
■ Hematospermia
■ Presence of blood in ejaculation; It may be accompanied by
prostatitis, prostate tuberculosis or cancer.
Ejaculation disorders
■ Absence of ejaculate or retrograde ejaculation (semen enters the
bladder).
■ Reasons:
■ Deficiency of androgens
■ Sympathetic denervation
■ Pharmacological agents
■ Outline of urinary
Hypospadias
■ Inspection of scrotum
Varicocele
■ Inspection of scrotum
Phimosis Paraphimosis
Hypospadias
Palpation
■ Palpate for kidneys
■ Normally only the lower pole can be felt when breathd deeply.
■ Interlobar duct
■ Lecithin granules
■ Rarely sperm
■ Palpation
■ Vaginal examination
Pediatric urology and anomalies
Embryogenesis
■ Human genitourinary system develops from the urogenital ridge on the
dorsal surface of the embryo. The latter is further differentiated into the
urinary and genital systems.
■ During pregnancy, the kidney goes through three successive stages of
development : Pronephros, mesonephros and metanephros.
■ Pronephros is a dysfunctional structure and soon degenerates.
■ Mesonephros is a temporary excretory organ. The greater part of it also
degenerates, a part (ureteric bud) produces ureter. Its termination (The
wolffian duct) produces an epididymis, ductus deferens, seminal vesicle and
ejaculatory duct in men.
■ Metanephrosis becomes the definitive kidney. In the formation of the
metanephrosis takes part:
■ Mesonephrotic ureteric bud - Upcoming pelvis and urethra;
■ Arounding mesodermic area – Upcoming glomerular apparatus and
tubular system.
■ The definitive kidney then migrates upward and takes its place in the lumbar
region.
■ Metanephros opens in the urogenital sinus, from
which the urinary bladder and urethra arise.
■ The following basic structures are involved in genital
embryogenesis :
■ Undifferentiated gonads 🡪 The testicles in the male
and the ovaries in the female.
■ The formed gonads then migrate from the abdominal cavity
to the pelvis (female) and scrotum (male).
■ Paramesonephric (the Mullerian) ducts 🡪 The uterus
and cervix, fallopian tubes.
■ Mesonephric (the Wolffian) ducts 🡪 Epididymis,
ductus deferenses, seminal vesicles and ejaculatory
duct.
■ Phimosis - is a condition in which the foreskin cannot be
retracted from around the tip of the penis.
■ Treatment: Circumcision (Indication: Recurrent infections,
difficulty urinating); Short frenum correction (Frenulotomy).
■ Paraphimosis - is a condition in which the foreskin can no
longer be pulled forward over the tip of the penis.
■ Often iatrogenic: after catheterization.
Short frenum
It is necessary to differentiate the phimosis in children
with long foreskin
Cryptorchidism
■ Is the absence of at least one testicle from the scrotum.
■ Types: (1) A testis retention at the level of the abdomen,
inguinal canal or outer inguinal ring; (2) Thigh, penodorsal or
epipfascial ectopia.
• Inspection, palpation
• Ultrasonography, ct, mri
• Laparoscopy
Other anomalies of the urethra, urinary
bladder, and external genitals
Hypospadias
Epispadias
Micropenis
Congenital penile curvature
Duplication of urethra
Ectopic urinary bladder
Ambiguous genitals
Ambiguous genitals
Hypospadias
■ Abnormal localization of the urethral opening on the ventral
surface of the penis, scrotum or perineum.
■ Classification by localization : Distal (glanular, coronal,
subcoronal), midshaft, proximal (penoscrotal, scrotal, perineal)
■ Evaluating:
■ External urethral orifice diameter, shape, location;
■ Penis size, curved erectile penis, inflammatory changes;
■ Existence of other congenital anomalies of the genitourinary
system;
■ Treatment:
■ Surgical treatment needed: (1) Midshaft and proximal
hypospadias, (2) distal hypospadias,
if it is accompanied by penile fracture the and
Meatal stenosis.
■ Surgery: Correction of curved penis,
formation of new external urethral orifice and
put the external urethral orifice on top of the
pennis.
Epispadias
■ Localization of the external urethral orifice on the
dorsal surface of the penis.
■ Rare malformation of the penis than
hypospadias.
■ Often accompanied by urinary bladder exstrophy.
■ It is characterized by penile curvature and
urinary incontinence.
■ The treatment is surgical : Curvature correction,
reconstruction of the external urethral orifice.
Hypospadias
■ Vesicorenal reflux,
■ Megaureter,
■ Urethral valve,
■ L-shaped kidney,
■ Hydrocalycosis
■ Megacalycosis
■ Unipapillary kidney
■ Funnel-shaped pelvis
■ Ureteral diverticulum,
■ Ureteric valve.
■ Ureteropelvic segment obstruction
■ One of the most common pathologies.
Percutaneous
nephrostomy
Acute pyelonephritis
Complications
Renal abscess
Renal abscess: Percutaneous drainage
Acute pyelonephritis
Complications
Pyonephrosis
Acute pyelonephritis
Complications
Emphysematous pyelonephritis
• Ultrasonography
– Non-invasive
– In pregnant women !
• Review and Excretory Urography
• Computed tomography
– Modern ”Gold Standard”
The right renal and
ureteral
concrements(review
urography)
Left: Phlebolith
კენჭი
(calcification within a
vein)
ფლებოლითი
Bilateral staghorn
calculi
Computed
tomography.
Right renal
concrement
Ultrasonography. The
renal pelvicalyceal system
is dilated due to the
ureteral concrement.
1 Conservative
1 Remote (extracorporeal) shock wave
lithotripsy
1 Endoscopic (ureterorenoscopy)
1 Endoscopic (percutaneous)
1 Open surgery
Kidney stones
> 2 cm 1. Percutaneous nephrolitholapaxy
2. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy + Ureteric stenting
3. Nephrolithotomy
Stone
• Stone size<5მმ
• Lower 1/3 of
ureter
• Absence of
obstruction
Extracorporeal shock wave
lithotripsy
• Focused shock waves
• Radiological / echoscopic control
Mechanism of
extracorporeal shock
wave lithotripsy
Ureteroscopy
• Concrements of lower
segment of ureter
• Breaking ways
– Laser
– Mechanical
– Ultrasound
Ureteroscope
Percutaneous nephrolitholapaxy
(PNL)
• Nephroscopic
manipulation
• Breaking of the
concrement and
extraction of the
fragments by a
nephrostomic catheter
Nephrolithotomy
Open surgery, PNL, URS
Lithotripsy
Control
• Metabolic analysis
• Serum calcium Prevention
• Complete metabolic
analysis is needed in •Fluids
recurrent, complicated, • High-fiber diet
bilateral, and X-ray
negative stones. • Animal proteins
• Salt
• Sugar
• Alcohol
Urinary bladder concrements
• Pathophysiology, treatment differs from kidney
stones
• Almost always in older men
• Most often it is a complication of other urological
pathologies :
– Infravesical obstruction (prostatic hyperplasia)
– Chronic infection (Proteus)
– Prolonged catheterization
Urinary bladder
concrement
?
Abdominal / pelvic review
radiography. Giant,
calcified fibrinoid in uterus
resembles urinary bladder
concrement.
Urinary bladder concrements
Treatment
Transurethral
cystolitholapaxy
Suprapubic cystolithotomy
UROLOGICAL TUMORS
UROLOGICAL TUMORS
⚫ Prostate cancer
⚫ Urinary bladder cancer
⚫ Kidney cancer
⚫ Testicular cancer
UROLOGICAL TUMORS
STATISTICS IN EUROPE
Prostate cancer
Epidemiology
PROSTATE CANCER
⚫ The most common cancer among men
⚫ The second leading cause of cancer death for
men, left behind lung cancer
⚫ Risk factors:
◦ Racial, ethnicity
◦ Hereditary load
◦ Nutrition, hormonal status...
Anatomy of the prostate
CZ Central Zone B
PZ Peripheral Zone
bladder
PPS Preprostatic
VAS VAS
Sphincter SV SV
PPS
U Urethra
V Verumontanum
U
ED Ejaculatory CZ CZ
Duct
ED ED
VAS Vas urethra V
SV Seminal vesicles urethra
PZ PZ
B Bladder
< 0,5 7%
0,6 – 1,0 10 %
1,1 – 2,0 17 %
2,1 – 3,0 24 %
3,1 – 4,0 27 %
PROSTATE CANCER
DIAGNOSIS
Computed tomography
PROSTATE CANCER
DIAGNOSIS
Skeletal scintigraphy(metastasis?)
PROSTATE CANCER
TREATMENT
⚫ Active observation – In low risk-patients
⚫ Radical prostatectomy (open,
laparascopic, robotic)
⚫ Radiotherapy (external or brachytherapy)
⚫ Hormone therapy (androgenic blockade,
surgical or medication castration) –
Generally distributed cancer
⚫ Chemotherapy - Hormone-refractory
cancer
Radical prostatectomy open surgery
Laparascopic radical
prostatectomy
Robot-assisted radical prostatectomy
Brachytherapy - radioactive capsules are
implanted in the prostate tissue
URINARY BLADDER CANCER
⚫ 90% - Transitional cell
⚫ 10% - Squamous cell carcinoma...
⚫ Superficial - CIS, Ta, T1
⚫ Invasive - T2-T4
⚫ Risk factors: Tobacco, amine paints...
Grades of urinary bladder cancer
სტადია დახასიათება
Ta Includes mucosa
CIS Carcinoma insitu (superficial, agressive)
T1 Invasion into the submucosal layer
T2 Invasion into the muscular layer
T2a In the inner half
T2b In the outer half
T3 Invasion outside the muscular layer
T3a Microscopic
T3b Macroscopic (extravesical mass)
T4 Invasion into the nearby organs
T4a Prostate, vagina, uterus
T4b Pelvic wall, anterior wall of abdomen
Grades of urinary bladder cancer
Non-invasive Invasive
URINARY BLADDER CANCER
SYMPTOMS
⚫ Dysuria
⚫ Hematuria
⚫ Differential diagnosis: Infectious and
inflammatory diseases, prostate
pathology, Concrements, upper urinary
tract tumors
⚫ In all cases, cystoscopy is needed
Fluorescence cystoscopy facilitates the detection of tumor
growth.
Conventional and fluorescence cystoscopy
URINARY BLADDER CANCER
TREATMENT. TRANSURETHRAL
RESECTION
Urinary bladder cancer Grade
Ta T1 Cis T2 – T4
Mucosa
Submucosa
+ Chemotherapy
TUR Cystectomy
Muscle layer
URINARY BLADDER CANCER
TREATMENT. RADICAL CYSTECTOMY
Tobacco
- Advanced case:
• Pain
• Macrohematuria
• Palpable tumor
• Varicocele
• Lose weight
• Hypercalcemia
• Anemia
Cryoablation
Radiofrequency ablation
Renal cell carcinoma
Symptomatic treatment
⚫ Chemotherapy is ineffective
⚫ Immunotherapy (interferon, tyrosine kinase
inhibitors, m-Tor inhibitors, antibodies) – In
correctly selected, with metastasized, patients
after surgical treatment
TESTICULAR CANCER
⚫ 1-1.5% of cancers in men
⚫ 5% of urologic tumors
⚫ It is most common at the age of 30-40
⚫ When diagnosed, 1-2% are bilateral
⚫ Epidemiological risk factors:
◦ Cryptorchidism
◦ Genetic disorders (Klinefelter Syndrome)
◦ Family history
◦ Infertility in anamnesis
TESTICULAR CANCER
⚫ Classification
◦ Seminoma
◦ Non-seminoma cancer
● Choriocarcinoma
● Yolk sac tumor
● Teratoma
● Mixed type
TESTICULAR CANCER
⚫ Clinical manifestations
◦ Painless palpable formation
◦ Scrotal pain
◦ 10% are identified as acute orchitis
◦ Metastasizes to the lymph nodes, in the retroperitoneal space (place of
embryonic origin of testis!)
⚫ Oncomarkers
◦ Alpha-fetoprotein
● Increases in 50-70% of non-monomers
● Does not increase during seminoma
◦ β-chorionic gonadotropin
● Increases in 40-60% of non-seminomas
● Increases in 30% of seminomas
◦ Lactate dehydrogenase
● Less specific
● Often increased during seminomas
Palpation of the testis and funicle
Method of self-examination of testis
Testicular cancer. Computed
tomography
Retroperitoneal mass (lymph nodes)
TESTICULAR CANCER
TREATMENT
The primary intervention
in all types is radical
orchiectomy (high
hemicastration)