Phimosis: Difference between revisions
| Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
*[[Dorsal Slit (Penis)]] | *[[Dorsal Slit (Penis)]] | ||
*[[Penile diagnoses]] | *[[Penile diagnoses]] | ||
*[[Paraphimosis]] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
Revision as of 19:44, 1 July 2021
Background
- Most uncircumcised infants have normal, physiologic phimosis
- Nearly all cases resolve by 5yr of age
- Only emergency if causes acute urinary retention
Clinical Features
- Unable to retract foreskin over glans
Differential Diagnosis
Non-Traumatic penile diagnoses
Penile trauma types
Evaluation
- Typically a clinical diagnosis
- Ensure that patient able to urinate
Management
- Dilation of foreskin with hemostat
- Foley cathether if urinary retention is present
- Topical steroids - Triamcinolone 0.025% BID x4-6 weeks
- Can avert need for circumcision after phimosis
- Dorsal Slit / circumcision is definitive treatment
Disposition
- Discharge with follow-up (primary care/urology)
