African Journal of Urology (Sep 2020)

Is nerve sparing clitoroplasty really a nerve sparing?

  • Waleed Dawood,
  • Dina Abdallah,
  • Ashraf Soliman,
  • Doaa Khater,
  • Shaymaa Elsayed,
  • Magdy Omar,
  • Haytham Badawy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-020-00046-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Abstract Background Surgery for clitoral reduction has been practised for over half a century. The aim of clitoral surgery is to achieve normal clitoral morphology without compromising sexual function. To achieve these purposes, many techniques were developed since Young first reported reduction clitoroplasty in 1937. As the importance of the neurovascular bundle was realized, attempts were made to preserve this structure aiming at preservation of the sensory supply to the clitoris to achieve sexual satisfaction. Methods The study was conducted on six patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, who were operated upon with reduction clitoroplasty with neurovascular bundle preservation as a part of the genital reconstruction; surgery was done by single author (first author). Whole surgically removed corporal bodies were processed. Examination of the sections was done for the presence of nerve bundles related to the anatomical location of the neurovascular bundle using S100 immunohistochemical staining. Results In four cases, the presence of nerve fibers in the removed part of the corpus stained by S100 was high on the dorsal surface, with the presence of large nerve fibers (score 3–4), and low on the ventral surface with the presence of small nerve fibers (score 1). In the other two cases, it was low on both surfaces (score 1). Conclusion Subfacial clitoroplasty technique carries an inevitable risk of nerve injury and should be replaced by the subtunical technique. Level of evidence IV. Type of study: case series with no comparison group.

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