Journal article
Authors list: Hauck, EW; Diemer, T; Weidner, W
Publication year: 2006
Pages: 243-257
Journal: Urologe A
Volume number: 45
Issue number: 2
ISSN: 1433-0563
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-005-0988-0
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
Peyronie's disease is characterized by the formation of a plaque of the tunica albuginea that leads to a mainly dorsally directed penile curvature and penile shortening due to scarification. The exact ethiopathology remains unclear. The natural history of the disease is variable, ranging from spontaneous remissions to chronic, and including severe penile curvature. Therapy should be conservative in the early, painful, progressive phase. No conservative medical or semi-invasive treatment modality,such as extra corporeal shockwave therapy or radiation therapy, is currently available for curing all of the symptoms of this disorder in all patients. All studies with a controlled design showed poor therapeutic outcomes that are frequently identical to the natural course. Surgical therapy should only be performed in the stable stage of the disease. This means that Peyronie's disease should have been present for at least 12 months, and the patient should not have suffered from pain or the progression of symptoms for at least 6 months. The surgical treatment modalities comprise plication procedures (Essed-Schroeder, Nesbit), plaque-incisions with grafting, and the insertion of penile implants with simultaneous correction of the curvature by "penile cracking" or incisions of the plaque.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Hauck, E., Diemer, T. and Weidner, W. (2006) Peyronie's disease. Conservative and surgical therapy, Urologe A, 45(2), pp. 243-257. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-005-0988-0
APA Citation style: Hauck, E., Diemer, T., & Weidner, W. (2006). Peyronie's disease. Conservative and surgical therapy. Urologe A. 45(2), 243-257. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-005-0988-0
Keywords
drug therapy; extracorporeal shock wave therapy; Peyronie's disease; RADIOTHERAPY; surgical therapy