RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: It was to compare picture and results of anatomopathological exams of the operated organs, given the individualization of new procedures in recent years. METHODS: One hundred and eighty-two patients, aged from 50 to 98 years, were hospitalized for prostatic tumors. After a complete clinical exam followed by surgery, the operated organs were the subject of a conventional histological study. Data from the rectal touch (RT) were compared with the histological results. RESULTS: In the diagnosis of benignancy, RT and the histology are in agreement in 93% of the cases, though only in 75% of the cases of suspected malignancy. Seven percent of the occult cancers are observed, of which ten cases (6%) are adenocarcinoma at Stage A, and two cases (1%) of carcinoma in situ. We observe as well one case of prostatic localization of leukemia and one case of leiomyosarcoma. Prostatitic-type inflammatory lesions and malpighian metaplasias are very frequent 18 and 7%, respectively). Basal cell hyperplasia is rare. CONCLUSION: The RT keeps its place in the exploration of the prostate, within the framework of individual screening and patient follow-up. Transrectal echography and protein-specific antigen (PSA) dosing are certainly necessary but expensive in our country. Histology, which remains irreplaceable, allows us to make a definitive diagnosis at low cost.
Assuntos
Adenocarcinoma/patologia , Neoplasias da Próstata/patologia , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos RetrospectivosRESUMO
The authors report a series of 157 stenoses of the urethra treated by endoscopic urethrotomy between 1991 and 1997. After a first urethrotomy the success rate is 51.8%, with a decline of one year. Mortality is zero, and the morbidity assessed at 9%. For these authors, the result is better when the urethrotomy concerns an uninfected, one-time, short (less than 2 cm) stenosis, whatever the etiology, located on the proximal urethra. The duration of the postoperatory catheter has been fixed at three days. Poor results (35.20%) have been reported in stretched stenoses located on the distal urethra. These poor results have been treated by another urethrotomy, with 25% good results. The remaining 10.2% have needed sessions of urethral dilatation, even a plasty.