Posts tagged as:

vaginoplasty

A Surgeon’s Perspective

by Katrina on June 19, 2008

I had the opportunity to share this case report suggesting vaginoplasty may be easier at puberty with several pedaitric urologists. Brad Kropp, of the University of Oklahoma, had the following to say:

Interesting case report.  The images are very interesting.  When I look at the vaginogram at 3 months you see a very small vagina. The MRI, years later, then demonstrates a large fluid (most likely urine) filled vagina and uterus.  I would propose that the vagina is closer to the perineum because the chronic vaginal distention that occurred from the retained urine in both the vagina and uterus.  I have seen this same picture on several of the cloacal kids prior to my reconstruction that develop this type of distention.  There is no doubt that a large vagina is easier to work with but I would be interested to know how many UTI’s and problems this child had because of the chronic distention and retention of urine.

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Vaginoplasty Easier at Puberty?

by Katrina on June 13, 2008

Going against conventional wisdom that vaginoplasty in infants is technically easier, a new case study suggests that surgery at puberty may not be all that more difficult due to anatomical changes in the pelvis as the child grows.  The surgeons report the the case of a girl with CAH on whom they chose not to do vaginoplasty in the neonatal period because of what they described as her “short vagina and long urogenital sinus,” which would have made an already difficult surgery even more complex. When she began puberty at age 9 they did a magnetic resonance scan of her pelvis and found that her vaginal size had increased and her vagina and urogenital sinus had descended toward the perineum—changes that would make surgery less difficult than if it had been performed earlier in her life. This is despite the greater difficulty “mobilizing” tissue in an older child. They conclude:

We therefore presently recommend that, since the vagina is not an organ that is essential in early life, for most children with CAH there is no urgency for vaginal reconstruction. Indeed the natural vaginal growth and development that occurs at puberty may have significant advantages in reducing the extent of surgery, which can then be done with fully vascularized, innervated, and lubricated local vaginal tissue.

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