Paraphimosis and Phimosis

What is it?

Paraphimosis: the penile foreskin becomes retracted around the coronal sulcus (= the circumference at the base of the glans penis), leading to vascular congestion and glans edema

Phimosis: the foreskin is retracted over the glans

This is only an emergency if it is causing acute urinary retentionKeep in mind most uncircumcised infants have normal phimosis

Why do we care?

 If left untreated, paraphimosis can lead to some awful complications, such as necrosis or gangrene of the glans penis which can then necessitate a partial amputation of the penis 

For phimosis causing urinary retention, can cause infections and renal failure

When to suspect it?

The main risk factor is lack of circumcision.

Crying infants (the S=Strangulation in ITCRIES for those who love mnemonics)

Adolescents may present later due to embarassment - can be caused by genital piercings or sexual intercourse 

Another risk factor is prolonged erotic dancing, ie wining - a gyrating motion that alongside others causes prolonged erection and friction on the penis (multiple case reports)

How do we manage it? 

Don't miss other injuries - look at their scrotum for a concomitant torsion or Fournier's 

Paraphimosis

Call urology urgently if you note signs of ischemia or the patient has had symptoms for >12 hours.

If there are no signs of ischemia, consider non-manipulative methods, which entail a combination of compression and osmotic agents as well as patience:

1. "Iced Glove" - place ice and water in a glove and invaginate the thumb portion to place the penis into

2. Mannitol or glucose soaked gauze - soak gauze in 20% mannitol or D50 and wrap it around the glans of the penis while applying gentle pressure; this can take 1-2 hours for full effect

Next, attempt manual reduction. Don't forget pain control!

Methods of analgesia: topical EMLA, dorsal penile nerve block, fentanyl, ketamine, procedural sedation (though certain studies have shown topical anesthesia may work best) 

Manual reduction: Have both thumbs on the glans while applying countertraction with the index fingers to the foreskin

If it works, make sure the patient can freely urinate , instruct patients to not retract the foreskin for 2 weeks, and arrange urology followup in 2-3 weeks. 

If it fails, URGENT urology consultation. There are other options in case of a failed manual reduction (injecting hyaluronidase, aspirating the glans, poking the foreskin) that are especially useful if no one is immediately available to assist you 

Phimosis

If causing acute urinary retention, call urology for likely dorsal slit procedure.

If patient is able to freely urinate, educate patient on how to properly clean their foreskin and show them how to retract the foreskin (3 months of this exercise has been shown to lead to resolution of phimosis in 76% of patients).

Topical steroids (triamcinolone for 4-6 weeks) also improve or completely resolve phimosis.

Sources

http://www.emdocs.net/em3am-paraphimosis-and-phimosis/

https://pedemmorsels.com/pediatric-paraphimosis/

https://www.aliem.com/trick-trade-management-paraphimosis/

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POTD: UTI? How to interpret your UAs and micros.

We diagnose UTIs nearly everyday, but are all of these true UTIs? Below, I will go into a quick review of what makes a UTI positive and various other tidbits. As usual, TL;DR is on the bottom of the post.

First off, patient should be instructed to provide a mid-stream sample, preferably clean-catch, however studies have shown that cleaning does not decrease contamination. 

Once collected, samples should be send immediately or refrigerated within 2 hours. This is to prevent proliferation of bacteria within the container itself. That being said, samples should still be analyzed expeditiously because refrigeration can also alter urinary leukocytes. 

Before you consider ordering any tests at all, consider this - does your patient really need testing?

UTI is a clinical diagnosis! In patients with classic symptoms for UTI (dysuria, urinary frequency, urinary urgency in the absence of symptoms that could suggest cervicitis or vaginitis), a negative dip or UA may actually falsely reassure you due to false negative results. In short, a negative result should not change your management 

Likewise, in a non-pregnant, asymptomatic patient, a false positive may lead to unnecessary treatment (besides, asymptomatic bacturia in a non-pregnant patient should not be treated anyway!!)

Now if you think a patient should be tested...

Nitrites
Nitrites are found in urine as a result of conversion of urinary nitrates to nitrites by gram negative bacteria that have been sitting in the bladder for > 4 hours. Studies have shown that they are highly specific (92-100%), but not very sensitive (19-48%). False negatives occur because nitrites require > 4 hours incubation, are not formed by some bacteria (Enterococcus faecalis) or are formed in small amounts, low urinary pH, or ingestion of foods/drugs that color the urine red. However, false positives can occur due to treatment with pyridium (phenazopyridine) and testing with strips that have been exposed to air. 

Leukocyte Esterase
Leukocyte esterase (if you remember back to your microbiology days) is produced by neutrophils and is associated with pyuria (positive requires > 10 WBC/hpf). Abnormal LE has been found to be highly sensitive (72-97%), butnot very specific (41-86%). To put that in perspective, the PPV is only 43-56%, meaning that of the patients that test positive, on the high end of the spectrum, only 56% of patients will have a culture-confirmed UTI. False positives can occur from contamination, false negatives occur from glycosuria, ketonuria, proteinuria, high urine specific gravity (increases cell lysis), vitamin C, or some oxidizing drugs (e.g. keflex, macrobid, tetracycline, gentamicin).  

What about microscopy?
So we tend to look a lot at the WBC/hpf to aid in our decision making. This is actually the less accurate method for determining pyuria - things like vaginal secretions can affect the leukocyte count. The more accurate method is hemocytometry. However, using what we have available, up to date recommends using a cut off of 8cells/microL, which corresponds to 2-5 cells/hpf. The question is how to use this information knowing that contamination can falsely increase your WBC count.

Some biostats:

  • Bacteria: sensitivity 46-58%, specificity 89-94%

  • > 5 WBC/hpf: sensitivity 90-96%, specificity 47-50%

Looks pretty similar to your stats for nitrites and leuk esterase, right?

There are several situations which can arise: 

  • Bacteria without pyuria: absence of pyuria with a UTI are rare, so this is usually indicative of contamination and a repeat test should be done. However if the patient has symptoms, they may have an entity called "acute urethral syndrome". Likewise, if your sample is from a patient that is chronically catheterized, lack of pyuria is likely due to colonization and not infection. Keep in mind though, patients that are immunosuppressed may not have pyuria due to blunted immune response. 

  • Sterile pyuria: can occur in patients that have already taken antimicrobials (your "partially treated" UTIs), contamination by sterilizing cleaning solution used to clean the urethra, vaginal leukocytes, dehydration, chronic interstitial nephritis, interstitial cystitis, uroepithelial tumors, appendicitis, diverticulitis, or atypical organisms such as ChlamydiaUreaplasma, and TB. 

Take home points:
Don't test all urine! In a young, non-pregnant female with symptoms typical of UTI, go ahead and treat! A negative result may cloud your judgement. In other situations (pregnant female, symptomatic males, the elderly with AMS that may be due to UTI), learn to use your UA and microscopy to aid in your decision making. Figure out what can cause false negatives and false positives. Positive nitrites and positive leuks? Treat! Only have bacteria? Test again! Only have leuks? Look for other causes! In short, only use testing as an adjunct to your clinical decision making. 

TL;DR:

  • Think about who you're testing! Not everyone needs a UA. 

  • Nitrites are highly specific, but not sensitive

  • Leukocyte esterase is highly sensitive, but not specific

  • Absence of pyuria is rare in UTI, so if you see bacteria, but no pyuria, it's likely not a UTI

  • Pyuria can occur in many different conditions, so if you have pyuria without bacteria, think about alternative diagnoses

Sources:
https://www.aafp.org/afp/2005/0315/p1153.html
http://epmonthly.com/article/lowly-urinalysis-avoid-common-pitfalls/
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/sampling-and-evaluation-of-voided-urine-in-the-diagnosis-of-urinary-tract-infection-in-adults
https://www.acepnow.com/article/avoiding-overdiagnosis-overtreatment-urinary-tract-infection-emergency-department/
https://emergencymedicinecases.com/uti-myths-misconceptions/

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Sunday Funday POTD: Priapism - a hard problem to solve?

Background:

Mercurius-Priapus_MAN_Napoli_SN.jpg

Named after the Greek god of fertility, Priapus, priapism is defined as an erection that lasts for longer than 4 hours that is not associated with sexual stimulation. Why do we care? Because 90% of men with persistent erections > 24 hours will have permanent erectile dysfunction. There are three types: non-ischemic, ischemic, and recurrent. 

Non-Ischemic ("high flow"):
The less common type, this is due to an excess of blood via a fistula between the cavernosal artery and the corpus cavernosum, usually in the setting of trauma. 

Ischemic ("low flow"):
The more common type, this is due to obstruction of venous outflow as a result of impaired relaxation of cavernosal smooth muscle. This is a urological emergency

Recurrent ("stuttering"):
A form of ischemic priapism that occurs in men with sickle cell disease. It's characterized by initially short erections that progressively worsen. 


Workup
:
History should include: duration of current erection, prior episodes, any medications used (legal or otherwise), history of hematological disorders (specifically sickle cell), history of trauma, how severe the pain is. 

Your entire workup is used to distinguish between ischemic and non-ischemic priapism. The table below summarizes the characteristics. 

Screen Shot 2019-04-15 at 11.22.03 AM.png

Treatment:

Call urology!! (if available)
If unavailable, believe it or not, high flow or non-ischemic priapism, can resolve spontaneously, actually does not require treatment, and can be managed as an outpatient by urology. 

First of all, analgesia should be provided. An easy way to do this is to perform a dorsal penile nerve block.

158691_1_En_32_Fig1_HTML.gif

Steps:

  1. Obtain consent, grab your materials (lidocaine), syringe, needle, alcohol/iodine, cleanse the area

  2. Insert a small needle at the 2 o'clock and 10 o'clock position at the base of the penis

  3. Feel for the pop of scarpa's (superficial) fascia

  4. Aspirate and inject 2mL anesthesia in each position

This can also be done under ultrasound guidance!
Second, the American Urological Association recommends primary aspiration of cavernosal blood. To do this, insert an 18 gauge needle to the lateral aspect of the penis one in each corporal body. 30-60ccs of blood should be removed. 

If this is sufficient, stop here. If tumescence persists, phenylephrine injection may be attempted. This should be given in 1mL aliquots of a 100-500mcg/mL concentration. To mix this, take a vial of phenylephrine (10mg/mL) and take out 1mL, mix this in a 100mL bag of NS. To make it easier, don't take the needle out of the penis and simply attach a syringe with the medication to the needle. This may be repeated every 3-5 minutes for an hour until resolution. 

Fun fact: epinephrine can be used as well based on several case series. The dosing: 2mL of a 1:100,000 (10mcg/mL) concentration. This is essentially your push-dose dose (ie. 1mL of code cart epi in 9mL NS)

If this fails, the patient will need urological surgery... won't bore you with the details here!

What about sickle cell disease?

Priapism in sickle cell disease should be managed in the same way as ischemic priapism. It is rare that standard therapies do not work, but if they do not, exchange transfusion or simple transfusion can be considered. Don't forget to get a retic level in these patients!


TL;DR

  • Ischemic priapism is painful and is a urological emergency

  • Call urology consult!

  • Provide analgesia/perform a dorsal nerve block

  • Aspirate with two needles laterally

  • Phenylephrine if this fails

  • Further management with urology if this fails

  • Consider exchange transfusion in patients with sickle cell disease with priapism that doesn't resolve with these measures

Sources:

https://www.uptodate.com/contents/priapism
http://www.emdocs.net/priapism-ed-pearls-pitfalls/
http://www.nuemblog.com/blog/priapism
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/priapism-and-erectile-dysfunction-in-sickle-cell-disease
https://www.asra.com/asra-news/article/151/peripheral-nerve-blocks-for-urologic-pro
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK535389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11416834

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