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DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1215017
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Polypoid lesions following surgical correction of bladder exstrophy
Publication History
Publication Date:
17 November 2009 (online)

A 28-year-old man with chronic diarrhea was referred for colonoscopy. He had been diagnosed as having urinary bladder exstrophy at birth, which was surgically repaired with bilateral ureterosigmoidostomy to divert the flow of urine. He had no fecal or urinary incontinence. Both abdominal and testicular ultrasound scans were normal.
Colonoscopy revealed two sessile polyps in the sigmoid area ([Fig. 1]). The polyps were 3 – 4 mm in diameter and at a distance of 5 cm from each other. These two “polyplike” structures corresponded to the sigmoid orifices of the two ureters.
Fig. 1 a, b Polypoid lesions (arrows) at the sigmoid orifices of the diverted ureters in a patient with a history of bladder exstrophy.
Ureterosigmoidostomy exposes the colon to a carcinogenic mixture of urine and feces, which necessitates annual follow-up examinations to monitor malignant transformation in the sigmoid colon and the rectal area [1]. The polypoid or polypoidlike lesions should not be removed inadvertently by endoscopic polypectomy in patients who have had ureterosigmoidostomy to avoid damaging the anastomosis, which could result in urinary leakage [2].
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CCL_1AD_2AC
References
- 1 Khan M N, Naqvi A H, Lee R E. Carcinoma of sigmoid colon following urinary diversion: a case report and review of literature. World J Surg Oncol. 2004; 2 20, 1 – 4
- 2 Woodhouse C RJ. Guidelines for monitoring of patients with ureterosigmoidostomy. Gut. 2002; 51 (Suppl V) 15-16
Dr. E. Kaufman
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of
Internal Medicine, University Hospital of Zurich
Ramistraße 100
Zurich 8091
Fax: +41442554591
Email: elad.kaufman@usz.ch