Zusammenfassung
Purpose: Studies of male pelvic neuroanatomy are mandatory to improve functional outcome after radical prostatectomy. We performed a topographical investigation of nerves on the course from the seminal vesicles along the prostate toward the striated urethral sphincter. Materials and Methods: Serial whole mount sections (1 mm intervals) of pelvic blocks of human adult male autopsy cadavers were ...
Zusammenfassung
Purpose: Studies of male pelvic neuroanatomy are mandatory to improve functional outcome after radical prostatectomy. We performed a topographical investigation of nerves on the course from the seminal vesicles along the prostate toward the striated urethral sphincter. Materials and Methods: Serial whole mount sections (1 mm intervals) of pelvic blocks of human adult male autopsy cadavers were investigated after immunohistochemical nerve staining. Computerized nerve quantification and planimetry of the total nerve surface area were performed within defined regions (ventral, ventrolateral, dorsolateral and dorsal) at the levels of the seminal vesicles and prostate, and at the striated urethral sphincter. The distance between the seminal vesicles and the nerves was measured. For improved topographical understanding 3-dimensional reconstructions were created. Differences between 3 independent variables were tested with the nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis test. Results: We studied a total of 969 whole mount sections of 5 cadavers. Nerves were arranged in a vertical plate lateral to the seminal vesicles. Mean +/- SD distance to the seminal vesicles was 1.68 +/- 0.84, 1.50 +/- 0.12 and 1.76 +/- 0.37 mm at the tip, middle and base, respectively. Periprostatic nerves were mainly found dorsolaterally. At the striated urethral sphincter 38.9% of nerves had shifted to the dorsal region. The total nerve surface area decreased significantly from the seminal vesicle tip (50.2 mm(2)) to the striated urethral sphincter level (13.3 mm(2)) (p = 0.0004). Conclusions: Our findings underline that during nerve sparing prostatectomy nerve damage might occur during mobilization of the entire seminal vesicles, apical dissection and posterior reconstruction of the rhabdosphincter. Nerve planimetry revealed that 75% of the nerves from the seminal vesicles do not reach the striated urethral sphincter level and seem to innervate structures other than the corpora cavernosa.