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ARTICLE |

RETROPUBIC PROSTATECTOMY

FRANCIS A. BENEVENTI, M.D.; FRANCIS P. TWINEM, M.D.
JAMA. 1949;140(10):851-855. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02900450001001.
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We present an analysis stressing the high lights in successful retropubic prostatectomy in 40 cases done in a city hospital. From this series, in which a large percentage of the patients were poor risks, we were particularly impressed by (a) the smooth convalescence and (b) the appearance of the urethra and bladder neck after operation.

HISTORY  Although the operation has been previously performed in this country1 and in Europe,2 it did not capture the fancy of American urologists until after June 1947, when Millin first demonstrated his operation in this country at the Brady Foundation in New York. The feasibility of the operation first became apparent to him during the course of radical cystectomy for carcinoma of the bladder.3 In removing the bladder transabdominally, he saw no reason why the prostate and seminal vesicles could not be extirpated at the same time without an additional operation via

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