Archivio Italiano di Urologia e Andrologia (Jun 2017)

Total phallic reconstruction after penile amputation for donkey bite: Case report and review of the literature

  • Francesco De Luca,
  • Giulio Garaffa,
  • Angela Maurizi,
  • Emy Manzi,
  • Carlo De Dominicis,
  • David Ralph

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/aiua.2017.2.166
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 89, no. 2
pp. 166 – 168

Abstract

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There are very few reported cases of traumatic amputation of the male genitalia due to animal bite. The management involves thorough washout of the wounds, debridement, antibiotic prophylaxis, tetanus and rabies immunization followed by immediate reconstruction or primary wound closure with delayed reconstruction, when immediate reconstruction is not feasible. When immediate reconstruction is not feasible, long-term good functional and cosmetic results are still possible in the majority of cases by performing total phallic reconstruction. In particular, it is now possible to fashion a cosmetically acceptable sensate phallus with incorporated neourethra, to allow the patient to void while standing and to ejaculate, and with enough bulk to allow the insertion of a penile prosthesis to guarantee the rigidity necessary to engage in penetrative sexual intercourse.

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