Priapism: Difference between revisions
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== Treatment == | == Treatment == | ||
#Morphine | #Morphine | ||
#IV hydration (sickle cell) | #IV hydration (sickle cell) | ||
| Line 41: | Line 40: | ||
#Transfusion (sickle cell) | #Transfusion (sickle cell) | ||
#Urology consult (especially important with traumatic priapism) | #Urology consult (especially important with traumatic priapism) | ||
#Aspiration | #Aspiration of corpus cavernosum | ||
##Rarely beneficial after 48hr | ##Rarely beneficial after 48hr | ||
##Penile nerve block (2 and 10 o'clock) | ##Penile nerve block (2 and 10 o'clock) | ||
##Aspirate | ##Aspirate blood from corpus cavernosum (3 or 9 o'clock position of shaft) w/ 19ga needle | ||
### | #Injection of phenylephrine | ||
##Dilute phenylephrine in normal saline to provide final concentration of 100-500mcg/mL | |||
##Inject 1mL q3-5min until resolution or one hour (max 1000mcg) | |||
== Disposition == | == Disposition == | ||
#Admit if refractory to treatment | #Admit if refractory to treatment | ||
#May dispo home if treatment is successful with close | #May dispo home if treatment is successful with close follow-up by urology | ||
== Source == | == Source == | ||
*Tintinalli | *Tintinalli | ||
*UpToDate | *UpToDate | ||
Revision as of 21:40, 10 May 2012
Background
- Prolonged, unwanted erection not a/w sexual stimulation > 4h
- May lead to erectile dysfunction and penile necrosis if untreated
- 2 types:
- 1. High-flow (nonischemic)
- AV fistula from trauma (lacerated cavernous artery shunts blood into cavernous bodies)
- Usually not painful
- Ischemia/impotence does not occur
- 2. Low-flow (ischemic)
- Veno-occlusion causing pooling of deoxygenated blood in cavernous tissue
- A/w SCD, meds, trauma, leukemia, infection, spinal cord injury/cauda equin, hypercoag
- Painful
- Fibrotic change leads to impotence
- Veno-occlusion causing pooling of deoxygenated blood in cavernous tissue
- 1. High-flow (nonischemic)
Clinical Features
- Erect corpus cavernosum
- Flacid glans and spongiosum
Work-Up
- CBC (eval leukemia, sickle cell)
- type & screen (may need to exchange transfuse)
- coags
- urinalysis/tox (etoh, marijuana, cocaine can cause priapism)
- abg from cavernosa (if hx unclear) hypoxic, hypercapneic, acidotic --> low flow
- Ultrasound
- Can distinguish between high-flow and low-flow
DDx
- Peyronie's Disease
- Urethral foreign body
- Penile surgical implant
- Erection from sexual arousal
Treatment
- Morphine
- IV hydration (sickle cell)
- O2 (sickle cell)
- Transfusion (sickle cell)
- Urology consult (especially important with traumatic priapism)
- Aspiration of corpus cavernosum
- Rarely beneficial after 48hr
- Penile nerve block (2 and 10 o'clock)
- Aspirate blood from corpus cavernosum (3 or 9 o'clock position of shaft) w/ 19ga needle
- Injection of phenylephrine
- Dilute phenylephrine in normal saline to provide final concentration of 100-500mcg/mL
- Inject 1mL q3-5min until resolution or one hour (max 1000mcg)
Disposition
- Admit if refractory to treatment
- May dispo home if treatment is successful with close follow-up by urology
Source
- Tintinalli
- UpToDate
- emedicine
