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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neonatal circumcision continues to be a controversial subject. The American Academy of Pediatrics has revised its earlier policy, stating that newborn circumcision has potential benefits as well as risks and emphasizing the need to explain these issues to parents considering the procedure so that an informed decision can be made. Compared with circumcised males, uncircumcised males are at greater risk for urinary tract infection, sexually transmitted disease,
phimosis
, paraphimosis, and balanoposthitis. Complications of circumcision include infection, hemorrhage, and meatal stenosis. Analgesia should be prescribed for the substantial
pain
associated with the procedure. Alternatives to circumcision include retraction of the foreskin with use of local or general anesthesia. Regular foreskin hygiene is important for all males, whether circumcised or not.
...
PMID:The circumcision question. 157 30
In most boys referred for circumcision preputial adhesions are the only problem, but these can predispose to recurrent balanitis. A simple technique using Emla cream (eutectic mixture of lignocaine and prilocaine) has been devised which allows the adhesions to be separated painlessly in the outpatient clinic. The technique was used on 39 boys aged 2 to 12 years referred for circumcision, none of whom had a retractable foreskin. The cream was applied under an occlusive dressing and left for 60 minutes before the adhesions were separated with a probe and a gauze swab. The procedure was completely
pain
free in 32 boys. One boy had to undergo a repeated procedure because he failed to follow the advice regularly to retract his foreskin in the three weeks after the procedure. Only one boy had to undergo circumcision later because of fibrous
phimosis
. In many boys referred for circumcision separation of preputial adhesions is all that is needed, and the use of this local anaesthetic technique avoids the need for general anaesthesia.
...
PMID:Save the prepuce. Painless separation of preputial adhesions in the outpatient clinic. 313 22
Between 1961 and 1985, 44 cases of penile cancer were experienced at Gunma University Hospital. We statistically analyzed 42 of them. The average age was 56.9 years old, ranging from 28 to 86 years old. Interval from onset of the disease to first visit to our hospital ranged from 0 to 50 months, averaging 9 months. The main chief complaints were mass formation, spontaneous
pain
, ulceration, and abnormality of urinary stream. More than 75% of them had
phimosis
. Thirty-one percent had stage 1, 29% stage 2, 38% stage 3, and 2% stage 4 cancer, according to Jackson's classification. All of them were diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma. Surgical treatment was given to 37 patients (radical or partial penectomy was performed in most cases). Chemotherapy was given to 23 patients (main chemotherapeutic agent was bleomycin or peplomycin) and irradiation to 26 patients. Five-year survival was seen in 77% of the cases, 92% in low stage group (stage 1 and 2) and 63% in high stage group (stage 3 and 4). Ten-year survival was seen in 62% of the cases, 79% in low stage group and 43% in high stage group (Kaplan-Meier method).
...
PMID:[Statistical study of penile cancer]. 337 23
A clinical study for genital herpes was conducted on 154 patients and the efficacy of treatment with oral acyclovir was investigated in 51 of these patients. The diagnosis was confirmed by direct immunofluorescence or viral isolation from the lesion. This disease has increased in both males and females in recent years and was found in 2.3-2.9% of the out-patients examined in 1986. Seventy percent of the patients were between 20 and 30 years old. About 70% of the male patients had
phimosis
. In patients with the first infection, bilateral eruption (62%) and lymphadenopathy (54%) were more common than unilateral lesions. However, in those with recurrent infection, unilateral eruption (72%) and lymphadenopathy (52%) were more common. Sixty two percent of those with the first infection had scattered eruption on external genitalia, but 71% with recurrent infection, had lesions concentrated in several areas. Local symptoms such as
pain
in the external genitalia (male: female, 16%: 85%),
pain
in the lower extremities (26%: 45%), discomfort in the lower extremities (20%: 41%) and systemic symptoms such as malaise (22%: 48%) and anorexia (4%: 35%) were seen more frequently in females than in males. In addition, systemic symptoms such as fever (first episode: recurrent episode, 36%: 4%), malaise (34%: 9%) and anorexia (18%: 2%) were seen more frequently in patients with the first episode than in those with recurrence. HSV type 1 infections were found in 16% of males and 28% of females with the first episode, but were less common in the recurrent episode, 0% and 13%, respectively. Direct immunofluorescence was positive in 75 (59%) of 128 samples diagnosed by viral isolation. Treatment with oral acyclovir tablets, 200 mg five times daily, was very effective in 26 of 30 patients (87%). No side effects were observed. In this study, acyclovir tablet has been shown to be a very effective and well-tolerated treatment for genital herpes infections.
...
PMID:[A clinical study of genital herpes and the clinical efficacy of acyclovir tablets]. 337 33
As
pain
is better prevented than relieved, 46 patients scheduled for
phimosis
operations, had for their
pain
control a penile dorsal nerve block: 37 children with additional inhalation anesthesia intraoperatively and 9 adults without any further analgesia. The technique used is described in detail. No untoward effects were recorded. It is concluded that penile dorsal nerve block offers such a simple, effective and reliable method of analgesia intra- and postoperatively that it should be an integral part of the anesthetic management of penile surgery.
...
PMID:Penile dorsal nerve block for penile surgery. 401 32
The authors present their technique of local anaesthesia in the surgical treatment of
phimosis
using a cream composed of an eutectic mixture of lidocaine and prilocaine (Emla). This cream, unlike injectable local anaesthetics, allows surgical procedures to be performed on the prepuce without
pain
.
...
PMID:[Use of an anesthetic cream in the surgical treatment of phimosis]. 924 48
Fifty-three boys were interviewed 11 years (9-14 years) after an operation for
phimosis
using the Plastibell technique. The interview concentrated on the cosmetic result, sexual function and late complications. Seventeen patients (31%) experienced cosmetic complications, and 11 patients (21%) claimed to have experienced psycho-social problems due to the appearance of the penis after the operation. Nonetheless an overall of 44 patients (83%) were fully satisfied/satisfied with the cosmetic result. Four patients (8%) claimed to have
pain
or discomfort on erection or intercourse. One patient (2%) was re-operated three years after the primary operation because of a recurrence of the symptoms. Overall 48 patients (91%) were fully satisfied or satisfied with the result after the operation. In conclusion we find the Plastibell procedure to be a safe and reliable method in treating
phimosis
. There are some minor technical pitfalls that have to be addressed in learning the technique, but performed in trained hands, the technique offers a very high satisfaction rate at long term follow-up.
...
PMID:[Surgery for phimosis with Plastibell. A follow-up study]. 965 34
Balanitis xerotica obliterans (BXO) is a scarcely known disease, wrongly considered rare. With a high degree of suspicion and histologic examination, the condition will prove to be much more frequent than one generally believes. The etiology of the condition is unknown at present. Many cases of BXO occurring after circumcision may be cases of secondary
phimosis
due to BXO not being recognized at the time of surgery. Most of the cases of BXO are seen in the third to fifth decades of life, even though they may occur at the extremes of age. Biopsy of the lesions is not essential in all cases and is indicated to differentiate from penile cancer and in atypical cases. Early diagnosis and treatment of BXO are very important in preventing the urological complications of the diseases such as urethral stricture. Treatment of BXO depends on the anatomic location of the lesions and their extent and severity, together with the rapidity of progression of the disease process. The treatment may vary from topical corticosteroids, laser vaporization in early cases to meatoplasty and urethroplasty in extensive cases. Topical pharmacotherapy is useful in the early stages to reduce the initial symptoms and slow down the progression, but is not effective in all cases and is not the curative treatment of disease. Meatal stenosis,
phimosis
, scar adhesions, fissures, erosions of glans and prepuce and involvement of the urethra are indications for surgical treatment. Surgery seems to be the only treatment that can relieve the symptoms of advanced disease. Modified circumcision, with total removal of inner preputial layer, definitively relieves
phimosis
without any recurrence. Meatotomy will not prevent the recurrence of meatal stenosis. Excision of the scleroatrophic tract and grafting of the glans base, coronal sulcus, and the end of the shaft give a complete relief of
pain
during erection and intercourse in circumcised patients with balanopreputial adhesions and restore the elasticity of the skin of penile shaft. These procedures have been shown to yield excellent functional results during a follow-up period of up to 4 years. BXO involving anterior urethra can be treated by 2-stage urethroplasty or substitution urethroplasty. The complete excision of the stricture and flap urethroplasty seems to be better than a 2-stage procedure. However, at the present time, it is not possible to say that surgery can completely resolve this chronic and progressive disease. Despite many reports in the literature of cases of BXO associated with squamous cell carcinoma, the etiologic relationship between the two conditions is uncertain.
...
PMID:Balanitis xerotica obliterans--a review. 1120 55
Physical examination of the genitalia was performed during an evaluation of women with sexual health problems. Cephalad displacement of the right and left labia minora enables full retraction of the clitoral prepuce and complete exposure of the glans clitoris, under normal circumstances. We defined clitoral examination as abnormal when the cephalad force resulted in varying degrees of incomplete foreskin retraction and limited exposure of the glans clitoris. The pathophysiology is likely to be secondary to recurrent vulvar dermal infections of blunt trauma changing prepucial elasticity. Clitoral
phimosis
, a previously undiagnosed physical finding, was identified in 22% of the women. Other than its link to sexual
pain
, the clinical significance of this finding, in particular the relation to diminished sensitivity and impaired orgasmic capability, is unclear at this time.
...
PMID:The prevalence of phimosis of the clitoris in women presenting to the sexual dysfunction clinic: lack of correlation to disorders of desire, arousal and orgasm. 1189 1
A 27-year-old man presented to our hospital complaining of multiple mild injuries sustained in an attack of violence at the workplace. He had received chemical burns to the penis induced by hydrochloric acid and had developed severe
phimosis
. He complained of
pain
on erection and ballooning during urination. The foreskin was partially resected with foreskin grafting for the stricture. The postoperative outcome was favorable and his symptoms were relieved.
...
PMID:[A case of acid burn of the penis]. 1249 15
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