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    Subjects/Surgery/Urology
    Urology
    medium
    scissors Surgery

    A man was brought to the emergency department after he fell into a manhole and injured his perineum. He gets an urge to micturate but is unable to urinate. On examination, blood was seen at the tip of the urethra, and swelling of the penis and scrotum was seen. What is the site of injury?

    A. Bulbar urethra injury
    B. Prostatic urethra injury
    C. Membranous urethra rupture
    D. Urinary bladder rupture

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: A. Bulbar urethra injury Bulbar urethra injury is the correct answer because the clinical triad presented—blood at urethral meatus, inability to void despite urge, and localized swelling of penis and scrotum—is pathognomonic for anterior urethral trauma. The bulbar urethra (spongy urethra) is the most common site of anterior urethral injury following blunt perineal trauma like a fall into a manhole. When the bulbar urethra ruptures, urine extravasates into the superficial perineal pouch (bounded by Colles' fascia), causing localized swelling of the penis, scrotum, and perineum. Blood at the urethral meatus indicates mucosal laceration. The patient retains the urge to micturate because the bladder is intact and filling normally, but cannot void due to urethral obstruction from hematoma and edema. Bulbar urethral injuries account for ~65% of anterior urethral injuries in India, often following straddle injuries or falls. The key discriminator is the *localized* swelling confined to external genitalia and perineum—not the diffuse suprapubic swelling seen in bladder rupture. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Prostatic urethra injury** — Prostatic urethra is a posterior urethral structure protected within the pelvis and rarely injured by blunt perineal trauma alone. Posterior urethral injuries typically follow pelvic fractures (especially pubic rami fractures), not simple falls. Additionally, prostatic urethral injury would present with suprapubic distension, inability to pass a catheter, and blood per urethram without the characteristic localized genital swelling seen here. **C. Membranous urethra rupture** — Membranous urethra is a posterior urethral segment located within the urogenital diaphragm, protected by pelvic musculature. It is injured almost exclusively by pelvic fractures, not isolated perineal blunt trauma. Membranous urethral rupture causes complete urinary retention with suprapubic distension and is a surgical emergency requiring suprapubic catheterization—not the clinical picture of localized genital swelling presented here. **D. Urinary bladder rupture** — Bladder rupture from blunt trauma presents with suprapubic pain, distension, and inability to void, but the swelling would be diffuse suprapubic and lower abdominal—not localized to penis and scrotum. Bladder rupture does not cause blood at the urethral meatus (urine, not blood, would be the primary finding). The localized genital swelling with blood at meatus is specific to anterior urethral injury, not bladder rupture. ## High-Yield Facts - **Bulbar urethra** is the most common site of anterior urethral injury (~65% of cases in India), typically from straddle injuries or falls. - **Colles' fascia** limits extravasation in anterior urethral injury to penis, scrotum, and perineum—creating localized swelling, not diffuse abdominal distension. - **Blood at urethral meatus** is a red flag for urethral injury; never pass a catheter blindly—obtain retrograde urethrography (RUG) first. - **Posterior urethral injuries** (prostatic/membranous) require pelvic fractures and present with suprapubic distension and inability to catheterize. - **Retention with urge** (as opposed to complete anuria) suggests intact bladder with urethral obstruction from hematoma/edema, not bladder rupture. ## Mnemonics **BULBAR = Blunt trauma → Anterior → Localized swelling** Bulbar urethra (anterior, spongy) → Blunt perineal trauma → Bounded by Colles' fascia → Localized genital/scrotal swelling. Posterior urethral injuries need pelvic fractures. **Blood at meatus = Urethral injury until proven otherwise** Any blood at urethral meatus → DO NOT catheterize → Get RUG first. This is the cardinal sign of anterior urethral trauma, especially with localized swelling. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair "inability to urinate" with bladder rupture to trap students who don't recognize that retention with preserved urge indicates urethral obstruction (not bladder rupture). The localized genital swelling is the key discriminator that NBE expects students to use. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, straddle injuries and falls into open drains/manholes are common causes of bulbar urethral injury in young males. The golden rule: blood at meatus = retrograde urethrography before any instrumentation. Delayed diagnosis leads to stricture formation, a major cause of morbidity in Indian urology practice. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 74 (Urology); Robbins Ch. 20 (Trauma pathology)_

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