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      Urethrography for Assessment of the Adult Male Urethra: RadioGraphics Fundamentals | Online Presentation

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          Imaging of urethral disease: a pictorial review.

          Retrograde urethrography and voiding cystourethrography are the modalities of choice for imaging the urethra. Cross-sectional imaging modalities, including ultrasonography, magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, and computed tomography, are useful for evaluating periurethral structures. Retrograde urethrography is the primary imaging modality for evaluating traumatic injuries and inflammatory and stricture diseases of the male urethra. Sonourethrography plays an important role in the assessment of the thickness and length of bulbar urethral stricture. Although voiding cystourethrography is frequently used to evaluate urethral diverticula in women, MR imaging is highly sensitive in the demonstration of these entities. MR imaging is also accurate in the local staging of urethral tumors. Copyright RSNA, 2004.
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            Imaging of male urethra.

            The male urethral imaging and pathology is not widespread in the radiology literature because this part of the urinary tract is easily studied by urologists with clinical or endoscopic examinations. Ultrasonography and MR imaging are increasingly being used in association with voiding cystourethrography and retrograde urethrography. The posterior urethra is being studied with voiding cystourethrography or voiding sonography which allows the detection of bladder neck pathology, post-surgical stenosis, and neoplasms. The functional aspects of the bladder neck and posterior urethra can be monitored continuously in patients with neuromuscular dysfunction of the bladder. The anterior urethral anatomy and pathology is commonly explored by retrograde urethrography, but recently sonourethrography and MR imaging have been proposed, distending the lumen with simple saline solution instead of iodinated contrast media. They are being used to study the urethral mucosa and the periurethral spongy tissue which can be involved in the urethral pathologies such as strictures, diverticula, trauma, and tumors. Imaging has an important role to play in the study of the diseases of the male urethra since it can detect pathology not visible on urethroscopy. The new imaging techniques in this area, such as sonography and MR, can provide adjunct information that cannot be obtained with other modalities.
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              Urethroplasty for Stricture Disease: Contemporary Techniques and Outcomes

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                RadioGraphics
                RadioGraphics
                Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
                0271-5333
                1527-1323
                May 2018
                May 2018
                : 38
                : 3
                : 831-832
                Affiliations
                [1 ]From the Departments of Radiology (J.C.F., R.B., C.B.) and Urology (G.E.L.), University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd, Dallas, TX 75390; and University of Texas Southwestern Medical College, Dallas, Tex (S.M.N.).
                Article
                10.1148/rg.2018170131
                29757722
                7a55379f-8b21-4a8e-834a-45a510a32fe9
                © 2018
                History

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