# Acquired Urethral Diverticulum After Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate: A Case Report

**Authors:** Ryan R Chen, Joao G Porto, Ruben Blachman-Braun, Ramgopal K Satyanarayana, Hemendra N Shah

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.57068 · Cureus · 2024-03-27

## TL;DR

A rare case of a urethral diverticulum after prostate surgery in a man with recurring urinary issues is reported, highlighting the need for awareness of this complication.

## Contribution

This is the first reported case of a urethral diverticulum following holmium laser enucleation of the prostate.

## Key findings

- A 69-year-old man developed a 6-cm urethral diverticulum after HoLEP for an enlarged prostate.
- The patient experienced persistent incontinence and recurrent UTIs post-surgery.
- Urethral diverticulectomy and urethroplasty were performed to address the complication.

## Abstract

Acquired urethral diverticula (UD) in males is an uncommon entity, and it is rarely reported after an open simple prostatectomy or transurethral resection of the prostate. Here, we report a unique case of a UD presenting after holmium laser enucleation of the prostate (HoLEP) in a 69-year-old male with a prostate of 372 g who had five episodes of urine retention over one year despite combined medical treatment with tamsulosin 0.8 mg and finasteride 5 mg. The patient also has elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) with five negative prostate biopsies over the last few years. The procedure lasted six hours with difficult morcellation due to beach balls that took 3.5 hours. There were no intraoperative complications. However, he continued to have mixed urine incontinence and recurrent (six) episodes of urinary tract infection (UTI) in the first postoperative year. On evaluation, his urodynamic study did not reproduce stress urinary incontinence (SUI); however, cystoscopy and retrograde urethrogram diagnosed a 6-cm UD in the bulbar penile urethra with penoscrotal mass. The patient underwent urethral diverticulectomy and urethroplasty with a buccal mucosa graft to correct the defect. Six months after his urethral reconstruction, he continued to have mixed urine incontinence needing two pads/day. Although male UD is a rare condition, our case report seeks to heighten awareness of such a potential rare complication in men with recurrent UTIs and refractory urinary incontinence after prolonged HoLEP for extremely large prostates.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** tamsulosin (PubChem CID 60147), finasteride (PubChem CID 57363)
- **Diseases:** urinary tract infection (MONDO:0005247)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** KLK3 (kallikrein related peptidase 3) [NCBI Gene 354] {aka APS, KLK2A1, PSA, hK3}
- **Diseases:** urinary incontinence (MESH:D014549), UD (MESH:D014526), SUI (MESH:D014550), urine retention (MESH:D016055), penoscrotal mass (MESH:C536030), UTI (MESH:D014552)
- **Chemicals:** Holmium (MESH:D006695), tamsulosin (MESH:D000077409), finasteride (MESH:D018120)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

16 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11052604/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11052604