FEMALE EPISPADIAS: A CASE REPORT AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE

Submitted: 16 May 2012
Accepted: 16 May 2012
Published: 16 May 2012
Abstract Views: 1381
PDF: 1077
Publisher's note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Authors

Female epispadias without bladder exstrophy is an extremely rare anomaly, occurring in 1 in 480.000 female population. It’s the mildest form of the extrophy-epispadias-complex (EEC), that is the most se- rious form of abdominal midline malformation (incidence of EEC can be estimated at 1 in 10.000 births). It’s imperative to diagnose this ab- normalities at birth, because that's enough a complete local examina- tion and a good patient’s past medical history, when the patient is greater, about congenital urinary incontinence and recurrent urinary tract infection. The early diagnosis, so the early treatment, is very im- portant to reduce the psychological and psychosocial problems and prevent the urinary incontinence, that’s a real problem for the social life of the patient. The pathology can be corrected by surgical recon- struction of bladder neck, urethra and external genitalia. Epispadias surgery is a reconstructive surgery and it has mainly two aims: the correction of the urinary incontinence and the reconstruct of the ex- ternal genitalia with good aesthetic appearance. In this case report we present a 3-years-old girl with isolated female epispadias, who un- derwent just one operation to correct her anomaly. In this patient the epispadias was unrecognized until 1 years-old. We reviewed, also, the Literature about cases of female epispadias that confirmed the rarity of the disease.

Dimensions

Altmetric

PlumX Metrics

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Citations

How to Cite

Angotti, R., Meucci, D., Garzi, A., Ferrara, F., Varetti, C., & Messina, M. (2012). FEMALE EPISPADIAS: A CASE REPORT AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE. Journal of the Siena Academy of Sciences, 2(1), 54. https://doi.org/10.4081/jsas.2010.484