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Aetiology

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Congenital:

  • meatal stricture, for example, with coronal hypospadia
  • bulbar stricture, for example, Cobb's collar

Acquired:

  • inflammatory:
    • urethral catheterisation - common in the UK; it is influenced by:
      • duration of catheterisation - prolonged pressure on the wall of the urethra produces a zone of ischaemia that heals with a scar. The most common sites are those where the urethra is most narrow e.g. the external urethral meatus, and at points of angulation e.g. the penoscrotal junction
      • catheter material and other chemicals e.g. lubricants
      • associated infection
    • balanitis xerotica obliterans - often diagnosed late
  • endarteritis obliterans - radiotherapy causing tissue damage and ischaemia
  • traumatic:
    • instrumentation - especially, at the membranous urethra
    • injury to the anterior urethra from a "fall astride" - the bulbar urethra is crushed against the under surface of the pubic bone
    • injury to the posterior urethra in association with pelvic fractures; bulbar urethra may also be injured
  • infective:
    • gonorrhoea - less prevalent today
    • non-specific urethritis
    • tuberculosis
  • neoplastic:
    • invasion from prostatic adenocarcinoma
    • squamous carcinoma - usually in association with chronic stricture where urinary stasis has given rise to squamous metaplasia
    • transitional cell carcinoma

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