Tuesday, 27 January 2026

Male Anterior Urethral Stricture Disease: Aetiology, Evaluation, and Modern Reconstructive Approaches | Chapter 8 | Newer Frontiers in Urology, Volume III

 

Background: Male anterior urethral stricture disease is a challenging condition characterised by fibrotic narrowing of the urethra, most often in the bulbar or penile segments. It leads to obstructive voiding symptoms and significantly impacts quality of life. Definitive management requires surgical urethral reconstruction (urethroplasty), which offers far superior long-term success compared to repeated dilations or urethrotomies This chapter reviews the etiology, classification, and anatomy of anterior urethral strictures, and provides an in-depth discussion of urethral reconstruction techniques, including excision and primary anastomosis (EPA), substitution urethroplasty with buccal mucosa graft (BMG), penile skin flap urethroplasty, staged repairs, and perineal urethrostomy.

 

Methods: A comprehensive analysis of contemporary and classical literature was performed, incorporating landmark contributions (e.g. Barbagli, Kulkarni, Mundy) and recent series. Outcomes, indications, and complications of each reconstructive technique are summarised, and a comparative table is provided for quick reference.

 

Results: Short bulbar strictures (<2 cm) are effectively cured by EPA with success rates >90%. Longer or multiple strictures are managed with substitution urethroplasty using buccal mucosal grafts, which is now the standard augmentation tissue and yields durable success in ~85–95% of cases, depending on stricture length and location. Penile fasciocutaneous flap techniques (e.g. Orandi, circular flaps) can achieve comparable success to grafts in appropriately selected patients, though flap use has declined due to higher donor site morbidity (torsion, sacculation, etc.). Complex and lengthy strictures (particularly those due to lichen sclerosus) often require two-stage repairs to achieve a stable urethral calibre. Perineal urethrostomy is reserved as a salvage or permanent solution in refractory cases and offers excellent relief of obstruction with an acceptable quality of life.

 

Conclusions: Male anterior urethral strictures can be effectively reconstructed with a variety of techniques tailored to stricture characteristics. In experienced hands at high-volume centres, one-stage urethroplasty (anastomotic or substitution) achieves long-term cure in the majority of patients, with overall success rates exceeding 85–90%.

 

Buccal mucosa has become the graft of choice for augmentation. Proper patient selection and preoperative optimisation are crucial. Postoperatively, patients require structured follow-up with objective (uroflowmetry, ultrasound imaging) and subjective (symptom scores) assessments to detect and manage recurrences early. This chapter provides urologists with a detailed, evidence-based guide to contemporary urethral reconstruction, including technical pearls, expected outcomes, and management of complications.

 

 

Author(s) Details

Velmurugan Palaniyandi
Department of Urology & Renal Transplantation, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education & Research Chennai India.

 

Hariharasudhan Sekar
Department of Urology & Renal Transplantation, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education & Research Chennai India.

 

Vivek Meyyappan
Department of Urology & Renal Transplantation, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education & Research Chennai India.

 

Sriram Krishnamoorthy
Department of Urology & Renal Transplantation, Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education & Research Chennai India.

 

 

Please see the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-47485-93-0/CH8

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