-
Review Case Reports
[Gunshot wound with a bullet lodged in the prostate].
- Eduardo Sánchez de Badajoz and Adolfo Jiménez Garrido.
- Area de Conocimiento de Urología, Departamento de Cirugía, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Málaga, Málaga, España. edusaba@telefonica.net
- Arch. Esp. Urol. 2007 Nov 1;60(9):1.117-9.
ObjectiveWe describe a most unusual urological emergency: a firearm wound in which the blunt-nosed hand-gun bullet was lodged in the prostate. A bibliographic search of the literature revealed no similar case.MethodsThe patient was admitted presenting a gunshot wound with the entrance hole on the right buttock. There was no exit wound. An X-ray revealed the bullet behind the pubic symphysis. We introduced a suprapubic catheter and then carried out a laparotomy making a discharge colostomy Urethrogram revealed a pathway of contrast to the rectum. Several days later, we reached the bladder with an urethrotome and introduced an 18 Fr catheter. Under radiological control we made an open approach to the retropubic space, palpated the bullet within the prostate and then removed it.Discussion/ConclusionsThe velocity of a rifle or hand-gun bullet is the main determinant of the severity of this type of injury. As there was no exit wound, we knew that the entrance velocity was low, therefore tissue damage would probably be small. In these cases, a preparatory suprapubic cystostomy is essential to be able to carry out a urethral reconstruction later. Radiological control during the procedure proved extremely useful to precisely locate the bullet. Our conservative approach of simply leaving in place the catheter helped us later to avoid a difficult repair of a recto-urethral fistula.
Notes
Knowledge, pearl, summary or comment to share?