Preputioplasty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Preputioplasty or prepuce plasty, also known as limited dorsal slit with transverse closure, is a minor plastic surgical operation on the prepuce or foreskin of the penis to widen a narrow non-retractile foreskin which cannot comfortably be drawn back off the head of the penis in erection because of a stenosis which either has not relaxed during childhood and adolescence or has re-narrowed after sexual maturity.
Preputioplasty is a treatment for phimosis in the alternative to circumcision and superincision or dorsal slit which is
-
- conservative,
- non-traumatic,
- less invasive;
- which
-
- can be performed on an outpatient basis under local anaesthetic in a doctor's office and
- has the advantage of healing very quickly
- without
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- any or any significant cosmetic alteration to the appearance of the penis.
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[edit] Methods of performing preputioplasty
Preputioplasty may be performed by Y-plasty, a technique also used in reconstructive surgery to loosen constricting scar tissue following traumatic burns.
However, Y-plasty requires a degree of surgical sophistication that physicians in general practice may lack.
More commonly it simply consists of one or more very short longitudinal incisions which release the stenosis — the constricting ring of tissue — in the foreskin and are closed transversely: [|] is closed and sutured as [—].
[edit] Comparison with dorsal slit
By contrast, the dorsal slit (sometimes referred to in anthropological literature as superincision) leaves the glans penis wholly exposed and the appearance of a circumcised penis from the dorsal aspect. However, no tissue is removed; the entire tissue of the foreskin gathers after a dorsal slit on the underside of the shaft, and gives the appearance of a turkey neck from a lateral or anterior view or in erection.
[edit] Preputioplasty versus circumcision and dorsal slit
European physicians and surgeons have carried out preputioplasties for many years in a social environment in which circumcision is widely considered anomalous.
Preputioplasty is appropriate in the majority of cases of non-retractile foreskin
-
- which are not complicated by scarring caused by recurrent infection or tearing and
- where there are no religious, cultural or other personal reasons mandating circumcision as the preferred manner of relieving a phimotic stenosis of the foreskin.