Exstrophic bladder duplication in the sagittal plane: Surgical management of a rare case.

Introduction

The bladder-Exstrophy-Epispadias complex (BEEC) contains a wide spectrum of congenital malformations. A treatment naïve refugee was referred to our center with what was identified as BEEC.

Materials and methods

A 27-year-old female patient was referred for total incontinence since birth by the general practitioner from the refugee center. An exstrophic bladder with blind ending ureteral orifices and a second non-exstrophic bladder with two orthotopic ureters was identified, demonstrating the bladder duplication in the sagittal plane. Laparotomy was performed, dissecting the exstrophic bladder plate caudally and using it as a ventral onlay to augment the non-exstrophic bladder. A Mitchell-type bladder neck reconstruction was performed with an autologous fascia sling around the bladder neck to obtain continence. As the patient had never voluntarily voided, chances of spontaneous voiding after surgery were low. Therefore creation of a continent Mitrofanoff-type vesicostomy was additionally realized and genital reconstruction was achieved.

Results

12 months post operatively, the patient was completely continent, had a bladder capacity of 250 ml, and performed self-catheterization 5 times a day. No post-operative complications were observed.

Conclusion

Admission of political refugees can implicate challenging surgeries for congenital malformations in adults, such as BEEC. This demonstrates the importance of multidisciplinary transitional care.

Copyright © 2023 Journal of Pediatric Urology Company. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Overview publication

TitleExstrophic bladder duplication in the sagittal plane: Surgical management of a rare case.
Date2023-08-01
Issue nameJournal of pediatric urology
Issue numberv19.4:487-488
DOI10.1016/j.jpurol.2023.04.006
PubMed37150636
AuthorsClaeys W, Jamaer C, Abramowitz D, Berquin C, Verbakel I, Ploumidis A, Hoebeke P, Van Laecke E & Spinoit AF
KeywordsBladder duplication, Bladder exstrophy, Transitional care
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