Article Text
Summary
This is a rare case of thrombosis of the dorsal vein of the penis (Mondor’s disease) occurred after an anterior-lateral retroperitoneal approach for a vertebral stabilisation in thoracolumbar vertebral fracture. Potential causes are traumatism, neoplasms, excessive sexual activity or abstinence. Although penile Mondor’s disease is a clinical diagnosis, ultrasound imaging is the gold standard to confirm it. In the reported case, 1 week after neurosurgical retroperitoneal procedure of vertebral stabilisation, the patient complained of a painful cord-like mass midshaft of penis. The diagnosis was made by clinical evaluation and ultrasound images. After 2 weeks of therapy with enoxaparin sodium, the patient recovered. The authors report this case evaluating the possible correlation between the anterior-lateral retroperitoneal approach and the development of the rare Mondor’s disease.
- venous thromboembolism
- neurological injury
- neurosurgery
- urological surgery
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Footnotes
Contributors MD: conception and design of the study and writing the manuscript. RB: acquisition of data, reporting and writing the manuscript. DN: analysis and interpretation of data and review of literature. DC: critical review of manuscript and review of literature.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.