Journal de chirurgie
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Journal de chirurgie · Sep 1997
Review[Firearm wounds of the lower urinary tract in men. Surgical management in emergency context].
The lower urinary tract is injured in less than 1% of all firearm wounds in men. In war medicine, blast wounds occur in 75% of the cases while in civil medicine ballistic injuries are more frequent. When the bladder and the posterior urethra is involved, the projectile usually follows a path through the gluteal muscles and pelvis. ⋯ Associated wounds involving the anus and rectum require colostomy, emptying the excluded rectum and wide pelvic-perineal drainage. An attempt should be made to repair the rectum or the sphincter. Genital lesions require early repair: tight suture of the albuginea of the cavernous bodies with or without a patch, preservation of viable testicular parenchyma and adnexal tissues (but orchidectomy is necessary in 50% of the cases).