Bacground: Patients diagnosis as penil fracture and treated with surgical methods were evaluated retrospectively between January 1990-February 2002.
Methods: Patients were evaluated by age, trauma type, time passed after the trauma, physical examination and radiologic data.
Results: The cause of trauma was blund trauma in all patients. 14 trauma (60.8%) were durig sexual activity, 6 trauma (26%) were during handling the erective penis in morning erection, 3 of trauma (13%) were due to the rolling on to the penis. Urethral bleeding was seen in 1 patient and microscopic hematuria was detected in 5 patients. Subcoronal circuler incision was carried out in 16 patients (69.5%), semicircular
incision was done directly on the injury in 6 patients (26%) and from penis radix to scrotum was done in 1 patient (4.3%). There was unilateral corpus cavernosum injury in 21 patients. Bilateral corpus cavernosum injury in 1 patient, corpuscavernosum, corpus spongiosum and incomplent urethral injury in 1 patient. Wound infection was detected only in 2 patients at postoperativly early period. After evaluating
20 patients with medical history and physical examination in postoperative control penil curvature permiting sexual activity was detected in 3 patients.
Conclusion: We concluded that patients with penil fracture may be treated with low complication rate by early surgical procedure.
Key Words: Penil fracture, genitourinary trauma, surgical treatment