Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report

Abstract Background Acquired male urethral diverticula are seen in patients with traumatic urethral stricture, urethral surgery, or rarely following prolonged urethral catheterization. Inadequate drainage of the urethral diverticulum leads to urinary stasis and stone formation. Excision of the ureth...

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Main Authors: Yogesh Boddepalli, Bhanumurthy Patnana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-02-01
Series:African Journal of Urology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00485-y
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author Yogesh Boddepalli
Bhanumurthy Patnana
author_facet Yogesh Boddepalli
Bhanumurthy Patnana
author_sort Yogesh Boddepalli
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Acquired male urethral diverticula are seen in patients with traumatic urethral stricture, urethral surgery, or rarely following prolonged urethral catheterization. Inadequate drainage of the urethral diverticulum leads to urinary stasis and stone formation. Excision of the urethral diverticulum with reconstruction of the urethral defect is the definitive procedure. A limited number of cases were reported in the literature. Case presentation Excision of the urethral diverticulum with reconstruction of the urethral defect is the definitive procedure. Large urethral diverticulum with stone following urethral surgery with adjacent stricture is challenging to manage. We report a case of a urethral diverticular stone with stricture in a 58-year-old male treated successfully using an excessive diverticular wall as a flap to reconstruct the adjacent stricture after removing the stone. We performed a retrograde urethrogram (RGU) and obtained information about the caliber of the urethra and the location of the diverticulum. The objectives in the treatment of symptomatic urethral diverticula are relief of distal obstruction, removal of all calculi, excision of the diverticulum, and closure of the urethral defect. Management options for this case are excision of the diverticulum with urethral reconstruction, optical urethrotomy and lithotripsy, perineal urethrostomy with stone extraction, and two-stage operations to remove the stone followed by urethral reconstruction. Conclusions Even though the recommended management for acquired male UD is diverticulectomy with the reconstruction of the urethra, in selected cases, less morbid procedures like urethral reconstruction with excess diverticular wall without diverticulectomy can be done to maintain urethral patency.
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spelling doaj-art-4c35732fd7cd43c883ae7ba34dcc15482025-08-20T03:10:50ZengSpringerOpenAfrican Journal of Urology1961-99872025-02-013111410.1186/s12301-025-00485-yManagement of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case reportYogesh Boddepalli0Bhanumurthy Patnana1Government Medical College and HospitalGovernment Medical College and HospitalAbstract Background Acquired male urethral diverticula are seen in patients with traumatic urethral stricture, urethral surgery, or rarely following prolonged urethral catheterization. Inadequate drainage of the urethral diverticulum leads to urinary stasis and stone formation. Excision of the urethral diverticulum with reconstruction of the urethral defect is the definitive procedure. A limited number of cases were reported in the literature. Case presentation Excision of the urethral diverticulum with reconstruction of the urethral defect is the definitive procedure. Large urethral diverticulum with stone following urethral surgery with adjacent stricture is challenging to manage. We report a case of a urethral diverticular stone with stricture in a 58-year-old male treated successfully using an excessive diverticular wall as a flap to reconstruct the adjacent stricture after removing the stone. We performed a retrograde urethrogram (RGU) and obtained information about the caliber of the urethra and the location of the diverticulum. The objectives in the treatment of symptomatic urethral diverticula are relief of distal obstruction, removal of all calculi, excision of the diverticulum, and closure of the urethral defect. Management options for this case are excision of the diverticulum with urethral reconstruction, optical urethrotomy and lithotripsy, perineal urethrostomy with stone extraction, and two-stage operations to remove the stone followed by urethral reconstruction. Conclusions Even though the recommended management for acquired male UD is diverticulectomy with the reconstruction of the urethra, in selected cases, less morbid procedures like urethral reconstruction with excess diverticular wall without diverticulectomy can be done to maintain urethral patency.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00485-yUrethral stoneDiverticulumDiverticular stone
spellingShingle Yogesh Boddepalli
Bhanumurthy Patnana
Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
African Journal of Urology
Urethral stone
Diverticulum
Diverticular stone
title Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
title_full Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
title_fullStr Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
title_short Management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture: a case report
title_sort management of urethral diverticular stone with stricture a case report
topic Urethral stone
Diverticulum
Diverticular stone
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00485-y
work_keys_str_mv AT yogeshboddepalli managementofurethraldiverticularstonewithstrictureacasereport
AT bhanumurthypatnana managementofurethraldiverticularstonewithstrictureacasereport