Urinary diversion

Urinary diversion is any one of several surgical procedures to reroute urine flow from its normal pathway. It may be necessary for diseased or defective ureters, bladder or urethra, either temporarily or permanently. Some diversions result in a stoma.

Urinary diversion
ICD-9-CM56.71
MeSHD014547

Types

Ureteroenteric anastomosis

A common feature of the three first, and most common, types of urinary diversion is the ureteroenteric anastomosis. This is the joining site of the ureters and the section of intestine used for the diversion.

The ureteroenteric anastomosis can be created in a number of different ways. There is the option of a refluxing or a non-refluxing type, and the two ureters can be joined into the intestinal segment either together or separately. The non-refluxing type has been associated with higher incidence of ureteroenteric anastomosis stricture, and there is doubt whether it has any advantages over the refluxing type. Therefore, many surgeons prefer the refluxing type which is simpler and apparently carries a lesser degree of complications.

Refluxing techniques include the Wallace and Wallace II and the Bricker end-to-side anastomosis. Non-refluxing techniques includes the Le Duc technique.

Complications

Complications include incisional hernia, neobladder-intestinal and neobladder-cutaneous fistulas, ureteroenteric anastomosis stricture, neobladder rupture and mucous formation. Ureteral diversion can lead to normal anion gap acidosis.

gollark: ++magic py 7950 + 2021
gollark: Sadly, it checks against the maximum year on all operations for some stupid reason.
gollark: In C modules, so I can't even patch it.
gollark: It's hardcoded.
gollark: The limit is exactly the year 9999.

See also

References

  • Hautmann R (2003). "Urinary diversion: ileal conduit to neobladder". J Urol. 169 (3): 834–42. doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000029010.97686.eb. PMID 12576795.
  • Macaluso JN Jr (Apr 1993). "External urinary diversion: pathologic circumstances and available technology". J Endourol. 7 (2): 131–6. doi:10.1089/end.1993.7.131. PMID 8518825.
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