Volume 15, Number 2Review ArticlesThe Use of Vacuum Erection Devices in Erectile Dysfunction After Radical ProstatectomyManagement UpdateNikhil VasdevKimberley HoylandJames AdsheadThe risk of postoperative erectile dysfunction (ED) following radical prostatectomy (RP) is reported to be between 14% and 89%. With an increase in the detection of prostate cancer in younger men, there is a greater emphasis on the appropriate management of ED following RP. A number of options are available to manage ED after RP, including phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors, intracorporeal injections, intraurethral alprostadil, and vacuum erection devices (VEDs). Penile rehabilitation programs are increasingly used to facilitate the return of natural postoperative erections; the VED is an ideal therapy given that it increases blood flow and oxygenation to the corpora to reverse the changes that result in ED after RP. [Rev Urol. 2013;15(2):67-71 doi: 10.3909/riu0574] © 2013 MedReviews®, LLCRadical prostatectomyErectile dysfunctionPenile rehabilitationVacuum erection device
Volume 16, Number 4Review ArticlesPost–Radical Prostatectomy Incontinence: Etiology and PreventionPrevention UpdateNikhil VasdevGregory BousteadKimberley HoylandAhmed AbrofAll patients undergoing a radical prostatectomy (RP) using any surgical approach, be it open, laparoscopic, or robotic, are at risk of developing postprostatectomy urinary incontinence. This side effect of RP has an effect on the patient’s quality of life and can be associated with moderate to severe postoperative morbidity. The authors present a review of the etiology and prevention strategies of postprostatectomy urinary incontinence. Based on the current literature, the authors conclude that there is a paucity of studies that can accurately answer the exact anatomic and physiologic etiologies of postprostatectomy urinary incontinence. The aim of urologic surgeons performing RP should be to reduce the rate of postoperative incontinence rather than attempting to treat it once it has occurred. Further studies aimed at providing a detailed anatomic map of the pelvic anatomy related to continence will help to improve surgical techniques and reduce postoperative urinary incontinence following RP. [Rev Urol. 2014;16(4):181-188 doi: 10.3909/riu0606] © 2014 MedReviews®, LLCRadical prostatectomyUrinary incontinenceUrethral length