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Although these procedures are available on the We care health Services, reconstructive genital tract surgery is not yet well established as a service, and patients may not automatically be offered the treatment options outlined in this section. If you or a family member requires treatment for a genital tract condition, you may need to make enquires and pursue these routes yourself.
Genital Tract Obstruction
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[/vc_message][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]The two sexes injure their lower urinary tracts in different ways. A woman’s urinary tract is vulnerable to obstetric disaster, but seldom to trauma, whereas a man may sustain any of the injuries.
What Conditions Might Affect A Patient In This Area?
Conditions that most commonly require reconstructive female genital tract surgery include:
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Or email at info@wecareindia.com / Call +91 9029304141
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How did the injury occur?
This will tell you the kind of injury to suspect.
Has the patient passed urine since the accident?
If he wants to pass urine, let him try, gently without straining. If he strains, urine will extravasate into his tissues.
If he has passed blood–free urine since the accident, his urinary tract has not been seriously injured. If he can pass no urine, or only a little blood stained urine, with frequency and dysuria, his urethra has been injured.
If his bladder is distended, you may have to needle it to reduce his distress.
Has he ever had even a little bleeding from the external orifice of his urethra? If necessary, milk his urethra to demonstrate blood at its tip. You will usually find this bleeding if you look for it. It confirms a rupture (complete or partial) of some part of his urethra (injuries D, E, or F, and occasionally B, or C). He needs a suprapubic catheter. The absence of bleeding is of no significance.
Prolapse of the genital tract Surgery
Prolapse of the genital tract is a relatively common condition; in the United Kingdom, for instance, genital prolapse accounts for 20% of women on the waiting list for major gynaecological surgery. Prolapse can involve the uterus (womb), the vagina or, as is often the case, both. It can be looked upon as a type of hernia where structures around the vagina drop down because of a weakness or tears in the supporting tissues. Thus, weakness anterior to the vagina can lead to a urethrocele (prolapse of the urethra) or cystocele (prolapse of the bladder), weakness at the top to uterine or vault prolapse, and weakness posteriorly to an enterocele (prolapse of Pouch of Douglas) or rectocele (prolapse of the rectum). Of the different types of genital tract prolapse, prolapse of the bladder is the commonest.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_message message_box_style=”solid” style=”square” message_box_color=”mulled_wine”]
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