Urethral Stricture and Urethral Rupture in Lebanon

تضيّق وتمزّق الإحليل في لبنان · Sténose et rupture de l'urètre au Liban

Urethral stricture causes scar-related narrowing of the urine channel, while urethral rupture is an acute injury that can follow pelvic or straddle trauma. Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly evaluates weak stream, urinary retention, bleeding, and reconstructive options in Beirut and Mount Lebanon.

Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly

Pediatric Urologist · Fellowship-trained in Europe

  • 📍 HDF (Achrafieh) · CMC (Clemenceau) · MLH (Hazmieh)
  • 📞 Clinic: +961 1 398 630
  • WhatsApp: +961 3 551 326
  • 🌐 Arabic · French · English

Medically reviewed by: Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly

Last reviewed: April 5, 2026

Sources used on this page: trusted clinical references and pediatric-hospital resources listed below.

What is a urethral stricture or rupture?

A urethral stricture is a narrowing caused by scar tissue inside the urethra. In children it may follow trauma, catheter injury, or previous surgery such as hypospadias repair. Urethral rupture is an acute tear or major injury to the urethra, often after pelvic fracture or a straddle injury.

Symptoms and warning signs

Stricture can cause weak stream, spraying, straining, incomplete emptying, recurrent urinary infection, or urinary retention. Urethral rupture may cause blood at the urethral opening, inability to urinate, severe pain, perineal swelling, bruising, or a swollen bladder after trauma.

How is it diagnosed?

Evaluation begins with history and examination. Tests may include bladder scan or ultrasound, urinalysis, and imaging of the urethra such as retrograde urethrogram or VCUG. Cystoscopy may be used later to define the location and length of a stricture and plan reconstruction.

Acute treatment

If urethral injury is suspected, especially when blood is seen at the urethral meatus, repeated blind catheter attempts should be avoided. The priority is safe urinary drainage, sometimes with a suprapubic tube, followed by proper imaging and a reconstruction plan.

Definitive treatment

Short strictures may sometimes be managed endoscopically, but longer or recurrent strictures may need urethroplasty. After rupture, treatment depends on the site and severity of injury and may involve catheter drainage, delayed reconstruction, or specialized repair.

Dr. Kallas Chemaly's approach

Dr. Kallas Chemaly treats urethral narrowing and trauma with a reconstructive mindset: define the exact site of injury, protect bladder drainage first, and choose the least traumatic repair that offers durable flow and continence. Families receive clear guidance about urgency, imaging, and the expected recovery pathway.

References

Serving families across Beirut and Mount Lebanon

Dr. Kallas Chemaly sees children from Achrafieh, Gemmayzeh, Saifi, Sodeco, Verdun, Hamra, Clemenceau, Ras Beirut, Rabieh, Mtayleb, Brummana, Beit Mery, Bikfaya, Mansourieh, Kornet Chehwan, Antelias, Dbayeh, Jounieh, Kaslik, Hazmieh, Yarze, and across Keserwan, Metn, and Baabda.

Related Conditions

Posterior Urethral ValvesHypospadias Surgery

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Blood at the meatus after a pelvic or straddle injury suggests urethral injury and should be assessed urgently before anyone tries to force a catheter.
Yes. Some strictures recur after dilation or endoscopic treatment, which is why the final treatment sometimes needs open urethroplasty.
Yes. Urethral scarring can develop after prior urethral or penile surgery, including hypospadias repair, and may need reconstructive assessment.

Concerned about your child?

Early evaluation leads to better outcomes. Book a consultation with Dr. Kallas Chemaly today.