Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 3
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 8-11
Abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) is defined by intraabdominal hypertension combined with multiorgan dysfunction. Clinical ACS has high morbidity and mortality. It requires swift though about its possible presence and urgent intervention. This is the only way to reverse its virtually desperate prognosis.
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 12-14
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common benign tumour in older men. Clinical manifestation of this disease demonstrated by lower urinary tract symptoms deteriorates quality of life of patients. Authors summarize current possibilities of modern non-surgical therapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia, watchful waiting and pharmacological therapy.
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 15-18
Living donor kidney transplantation has much more better long term results in compare to a cadaveric transplantation. That is why a number of this kind of transplantation is incrising. The kidney harvesting method from the living donor has two basic aspects – the operation must be very careful for a donor and must ensure high quality of harvested organ. We should use extraperitoneal aproach for the nephrectomy reducing post-surgery complications at the voluntary donor. We prefere lumbotomy or anterior subcostal extraperitoneal aproach as a possible open surgery methods. We recomand using hand-assisted retroperitoneoscopic nephrectomy from the...
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 20-23
ARGUS sling is a new bulbourethral operation for treatment of urinary incontinence in men after prostate surgeries. It is a further step in the improvement of so far presented sling operations. The development of new biomaterials has advanced and this is a set designed specially for men. Preliminary results are encouraging with higher continence success rate, but also due to more exact measuring of “leak point pressure” with minimal obstructive symptoms.
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 24-27
Prostatitis is one of the most common inflammatory entities encountered in urologic practice (30). Patients with prostatitis constitute about 25 percent of men who annualy visit urologist because of the genitourinary tract complaints (25). Diagnosis of prostatitis (prostatitic syndrom) is based on clinical symptoms, microscopic examination and culture of expressed prostatic secretion and samples of urine (28). The causative pathogen is found in five to ten percent of cases (38). European Association of Urology recommends the classification of prostatitis suggested by NIDDK/NIH (National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases/National...
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 35-36
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 30-31
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 32-33
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 34
Urolog. pro Praxi, 2006; 1: 38