Diseases of the male adnexa normally change the physical properties – shape, elasticity, consistency – of the posterior urethra and of the bladder neck. In order to demonstrate their influence on urodynamics experimental studies were undertaken: elastic models, straight tubes of equal diameter throughout their length, were used. Model I was a straight elastic tube of PVC material, three other models had unelastic segments of the same square area as the undeformed elastic parts. These segments were either circular (model II) or of the lunate (model III) or of the T-bar-type (model IV). Perfusion was performed under equal conditions. The experiments showed firstly that unelastic segments in an elastic system reduce the flow rate and secondly, that flow depends on cross section versus circumference, which is expressed by the so-called hydraulic diameter (Dh = 4F/U); Dh = hydraulic diameter, F = square area, U = wetted perimeter of the tube). The results support the clinical experience that size and volume of the prostate are by far not the only factors which determine the flow in the posterior urethra. They explain why changes of the physical properties of the wall of the posterior urethra and of the bladder neck alone can decrease the flow rate considerably. Elasticity, consistency and shape, frequently altered by diseases of the male adnexa are therefore at least as important regarding loss of friction as the factors mentioned above.

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