Endourology Treatment
Endourology refers to a specific specialty area in urology in which small internal endoscopes and instrumentation are used to see into the urinary tract and perform surgery.
Urology is a surgical specialty which deals with diseases of the male and female urinary tract and the male reproductive organs. Although urology technically is a "surgical specialty," a urologist must be knowledgeable in other areas including internal medicine, pediatrics, and gynecology because of the wide variety of clinical problems that a urologist deals with.
Subspecialty areas
• Pediatric urology
• Urologic oncology (cancer)
• Renal transplantation
• Male infertility
• Calculi (urinary tract stones)
• Female urology (urinary incontinence and pelvic outlet relaxation disorders)
• Neurourology (voiding disorders, urodynamic evaluation of patients and erectile dysfunction or impotence).
Procedures
What distinguishes endourology from traditional urology is that all procedures are done internally, without any extensive incisions. Endourology is also known as minimally invasive urologic surgery or laparoscopic surgery.
Endourology, for example, can be used to locate and remove small kidney stones.
Stones may be taken out or fragmented using tiny instruments inserted into the body through such areas the urethra, bladder, and ureter. In addition to treatment, doctors can help determine what is causing the kidney stones and help identify ways to prevent further stones from forming. Thin, flexible instruments including lasers, graspers, miniature stone retrieval baskets, special scalpels, and cautery, can be used to perform surgery without creating any incisions at all. Nearly all endoscopic procedures can be done on an outpatient basis.
Endourological procedures include:
Urethroscopy: Used to treat strictures or blockages of the urethra.
Cystoscopy: Used to treat bladder stones and tumors. Obstructing prostate tissue can be removed with this approach as well (a procedure called “TURP”). Flexible plastic tubes called stents can be passed up the ureter using cystoscopy and x-rays to relieve blockage of the ureter.
Ureteroscopy: Used to treat stones and tumors of the ureter.
Nephroscopy: Used to treat stones and tumors of the kidney lining.
Book Appointment