OBSTETRIC FISTULA (Part three)

2 - The GOH’S System

A - the distal angle of the fistula >3.5 cm from the external urinary meatus.
B - the distal angle of the fistula 2.5-3.5 cm from the external urinary meatus.
C - the distal angle of the fistula 1.5-2.5 cm from the external urinary meatus.
D - the distal angle of the fistula <1.5 cm from the external urinary meatus.

1 - size <1.5 cm, in maximum diameter.
2 - size 1.5-3 cm, in maximum diameter.
3 - size >3 cm, in maximum diameter.

Nothing or single middle fibrosis, > 6cm normal capacity.

Moderate / severe fibrosis and reduced vaginal capacity and size.

Special condition, post-radiation, ureteric involvement, circumferential fistula, previous repair.

3 - The Waaldijk System

  1. Surrounding mechanisms unaffected
  2. Surrounding mechanisms affected
    a - without subtotal urethral involvement
      - without defects
      - circumferential
      - with defects
    b - with subtotal urethral involvement
      - without defects
      - circumferential
      - with defects
  3. Ureteric fistula
    Based on size they are divided into:
      - Small <2 cm
      - Medium 2-3 cm
      - Large 4-5 cm
      - Very large <6 cm
Management of fistulas

1 - Conservative management

Excluded from treatment:

Treatment failure when:

2 - Surgical management

Juxtourethral, mid-vaginal fistulas are treated vaginally while juxtacervical fistulas are treated via vaginal or abdominal route.

The vaginal route has advantages: less bladder damage, less blood, less pain, fewer days in hospital and greater patient satisfaction.

The vaginal route is contraindicated when: there are damages in the vaginal tissue around the fistula, if the bladder has low capacity, low cooperation with the patient, presence of vaginal stenosis, involvement of other pelvic structures, when a ureteral reimplantation is required.

The abdominal route can be: intraperitoneal and extraperitoneal.

Antibiotic prophylaxis is done orally, single dose.

Preoperative preparation

Postoperative period