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Presentation of female urethral diverticulum is usually not typical.
Urol Int. 2008; 80(1):41-5.UI

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Symptoms or signs of female urethral diverticulum are usually not typical, thereby resulting in delayed or wrong diagnosis. This paper relates to our experience on the diversity of presenting symptoms and signs of female urethral diverticula.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

We reviewed the medical records and conducted telephone interviews of 14 patients with the diagnosis of female urethral diverticulum in our institution.

RESULTS

The mean patient age at diagnosis was 47.5 years (range 22-65 years) and the mean duration between symptom presentation and diagnosis was 6.46 years (range 1 month to 30 years). Their presenting symptoms were so diverse that many were initially treated under the diagnosis other than urethral diverticulum. Most patients were treated as uncomplicated urinary tract infection for a long time. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) was so dominant in 2 patients with big diverticula that they were falsely treated with anti-incontinence surgery. Total incontinence happened in 1 patient with genuine SUI and a big urethral diverticulum. One patient with a huge diverticulum, which had a fistula opening into the vagina, presented with day- and night-time incontinence. Some patients even did not have incontinence, but only had dysuria or a painful anterior vaginal wall nodule. Nevertheless, detailed analysis on symptoms and signs usually may suggest urethral diverticulum. We found that recurrent urinary tract infection, urinary incontinence, palpable suburethral mass, vaginal tenderness, and dysuria are the five major presenting symptoms and signs. The diagnostic rate of voiding cystourethrography during video-urodynamics, double-balloon urethrography and MRI were 10/10 (100%), 6/6 (100%) and 10/11 (90.9%) respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

The presenting symptoms and signs of female urethral diverticula are often diverse and easily overlooked. High suspicion of this disorder, detailed history-taking and physical examination are essential for detecting urethral diverticulum in females.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18204232

Citation

Chang, Yu-Lung, et al. "Presentation of Female Urethral Diverticulum Is Usually Not Typical." Urologia Internationalis, vol. 80, no. 1, 2008, pp. 41-5.
Chang YL, Lin AT, Chen KK. Presentation of female urethral diverticulum is usually not typical. Urol Int. 2008;80(1):41-5.
Chang, Y. L., Lin, A. T., & Chen, K. K. (2008). Presentation of female urethral diverticulum is usually not typical. Urologia Internationalis, 80(1), 41-5. https://doi.org/10.1159/000111728
Chang YL, Lin AT, Chen KK. Presentation of Female Urethral Diverticulum Is Usually Not Typical. Urol Int. 2008;80(1):41-5. PubMed PMID: 18204232.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Presentation of female urethral diverticulum is usually not typical. AU - Chang,Yu-Lung, AU - Lin,Alex T L, AU - Chen,Kuang-Kuo, Y1 - 2008/01/18/ PY - 2006/10/30/received PY - 2007/01/12/accepted PY - 2008/1/22/pubmed PY - 2008/6/5/medline PY - 2008/1/22/entrez SP - 41 EP - 5 JF - Urologia internationalis JO - Urol Int VL - 80 IS - 1 N2 - INTRODUCTION: Symptoms or signs of female urethral diverticulum are usually not typical, thereby resulting in delayed or wrong diagnosis. This paper relates to our experience on the diversity of presenting symptoms and signs of female urethral diverticula. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed the medical records and conducted telephone interviews of 14 patients with the diagnosis of female urethral diverticulum in our institution. RESULTS: The mean patient age at diagnosis was 47.5 years (range 22-65 years) and the mean duration between symptom presentation and diagnosis was 6.46 years (range 1 month to 30 years). Their presenting symptoms were so diverse that many were initially treated under the diagnosis other than urethral diverticulum. Most patients were treated as uncomplicated urinary tract infection for a long time. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) was so dominant in 2 patients with big diverticula that they were falsely treated with anti-incontinence surgery. Total incontinence happened in 1 patient with genuine SUI and a big urethral diverticulum. One patient with a huge diverticulum, which had a fistula opening into the vagina, presented with day- and night-time incontinence. Some patients even did not have incontinence, but only had dysuria or a painful anterior vaginal wall nodule. Nevertheless, detailed analysis on symptoms and signs usually may suggest urethral diverticulum. We found that recurrent urinary tract infection, urinary incontinence, palpable suburethral mass, vaginal tenderness, and dysuria are the five major presenting symptoms and signs. The diagnostic rate of voiding cystourethrography during video-urodynamics, double-balloon urethrography and MRI were 10/10 (100%), 6/6 (100%) and 10/11 (90.9%) respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The presenting symptoms and signs of female urethral diverticula are often diverse and easily overlooked. High suspicion of this disorder, detailed history-taking and physical examination are essential for detecting urethral diverticulum in females. SN - 1423-0399 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18204232/Presentation_of_female_urethral_diverticulum_is_usually_not_typical_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -