Simini Boards Cast

Chapter 112 - Part D: When Blood Supply Dies: Trauma, Strangulation, and Penile Necrosis

Simini Podcasts Season 1 Episode 197

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0:00 | 20:02

In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 112 — Penis and Prepuce with the most unforgiving truth in urogenital trauma:

The penis survives on flow. Blood in. Blood out. Urine through.
Lose one — and the clock starts. 

This isn’t “surface trauma.” It’s a mechanical failure cascade:

Flow lost → pressure rises → perfusion fails → tissue dies.

We break down why venous outflow collapses first (thin, low-pressure veins), while arterial inflow keeps pumping—turning the penis into a compartment syndrome time bomb. Then we add the second killer: urethral compromise (rupture, extravasation, obstruction), where urine becomes a chemical injury that accelerates swelling and necrosis. 

You’ll learn:

  •  Why penile trauma is usually vascular collapse + urinary plumbing failure
  •  Strangulation mechanics (rubber bands/hair rings/paraphimosis): venous blockade first → rapid necrosis 
  •  Urethral rupture: swelling isn’t edema — it’s urine extravasation
  •  Os penis fractures: bone can crush the urethra → obstruction 
  •  The decision line: viable tissue vs dead tissue (preserve vs salvage) 
  •  Why end-stage cases become plumbing surgery: partial amputation/urethrostomy when tissue is nonviable 

Key takeaway: If circulation stops or urine can’t pass, you don’t “watch it.” You act.

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