Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Robotic Excision of Intravesical Mesh Following Transvaginal Mesh-Based Prolapse Repair.
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Sarriera Valentin GF et al.
- Affiliation:
- Larner College of Medicine · United States
Abstract
<h4>Introduction and hypothesis</h4>We describe the surgical management of intravesical mesh perforation following transvaginal mesh surgery for pelvic organ prolapse.<h4>Methods</h4>A 73-year-old woman presented with intravesical mesh perforation 17 years following transvaginal mesh-based prolapse repair at an outside hospital. The patient presented with intermittent hematuria and recurrent urinary tract infections. Cystoscopy demonstrated an approximately 3-cm area of intravesical mesh with associated stone spanning from the bladder neck through the left trigone and ureteral orifice. A robotic-assisted transvesical mesh excision and left ureteroneocystostomy was carried out. Robotic-assisted repair was performed transvesically via transverse bladder dome cystotomy. Dissection was carried out circumferentially around the mesh in the vesicovaginal plane, including a 1-cm margin of healthy tissue. The eroded mesh was excised, and the vaginal wall and bladder were closed with running absorbable sutures. Given the location of the mesh excision and repair, a left ureteral reimplantation was performed. The transverse cystotomy was closed and retrograde bladder filling with methylene blue-stained saline confirmed watertight repairs, with no vaginal extravasation.<h4>Results</h4>The patient was discharged the following morning and had an uneventful recovery, including transurethral indwelling catheter removal at 2 weeks after CT cystogram and subsequent ureteral stent removal at 6 weeks postoperatively. At 2-month follow-up she had no new urinary symptoms or obstruction of the ureteral reimplantation on renal ultrasound.<h4>Conclusions</h4>A robotic-assisted approach is a feasible option for managing transvaginal prolapse mesh perforation into the bladder. Pelvic surgeons must be well equipped to handle transvaginal mesh complications in a patient-specific manner.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/39002047