Correlation between intravesical prostatic protrusion and maximum flow rate among Nigerian men with Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia

Authors

  • Christian A Agbo Jos University Teaching Hospital
  • Venyir M Ramyil Jos University Teaching Hospital Department of Surgery, Jos, Nigeria
  • Nuhu k Dakum Jos University Teaching Hospital Department of Surgery, Jos, Nigeria
  • Samaila I Shuaibu Jos University Teaching Hospital Department of Surgery, Jos, Nigeria
  • Idorenyin C Akpayak Jos University Teaching Hospital Department of Surgery, Jos, Nigeria
  • Chima G Ofoha Jos University Teaching Hospital Department of Surgery, Jos, Nigeria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55320/mjz.48.3.157

Abstract

Objective: To determine the correlation between intravesical prostatic protrusion and maximum flow rate in benign prostatic hyperplasia among Nigerian men.

Materials and Methods: A cross-sectional prospective study that included patients who presented to the Urology clinic of Jos University Teaching Hospital with clinical features of BPE. Each had IPSS, Qmax and IPP measured in addition to clinical evaluation. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS(R) version 20 (SPSS, IBM, Chicago, IL, USA). Appropriate test statistics were used with p-value < 0.05 considered as significant.

Results: Eighty-seven patients aged 40 - 86 years were enrolled in the study period. The means of age, IPSS, Qmax, IPP and PV - were 64.6±10.2 years, 16.7±7.6, 8.2± 3.8 ml/s, 12.9±7.0 mm and 70.1±50.3 mis respectively. IPP correlated negatively with Qmax (r=-0.519, p=0.000).

Conclusion: Intravesical prostatic protrusion measurement is non-invasive, easily accessible, reproducible and more cost effective. It showed a significant correlation with Qmax. Therefore, it is a valuable parameter - for evaluation of patients with BPH.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

12-01-2022

How to Cite

Agbo, C. A., Ramyil, V. M., Dakum, N. k, Shuaibu, S. I., Akpayak, I. C., & Ofoha, C. G. (2022). Correlation between intravesical prostatic protrusion and maximum flow rate among Nigerian men with Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia. Medical Journal of Zambia, 48(3), 207–211. https://doi.org/10.55320/mjz.48.3.157

Issue

Section

Original Article