Transurethral Resection of the Prostate and Bladder Neck Incision: a Review of 700 Cases

Abstract
Transurethral resection (TUR) is regarded as the treatment of choice for relief of outflow tract obstruction in the male, but bladder neck incision (BNI) is an acceptable alternative when the gland is small. Seven hundred cases of TUR/BNI have been reviewed (TUR = 388; BNI = 312). BNI was performed when the gland was < 35 g and where there was no clinical suspicion of malignancy. The operative details of the single incision technique are given. While the patients in the BNI group were younger, catheter stay was shorter, there was less infection, a significantly reduced need for blood transfusion and a satisfactory outcome in terms of control and need for further surgery. BNI is a technically simpler procedure than TUR and is easy to teach and learn. Results show it is safe and effective for patients in acute retention as well as those treated electively and it is the operation of choice for small benign prostates.