When does a tight foreskin require treatment?

Written by: Mr Brian MacCormack
Published:
Edited by: Sophie Kennedy

While phimosis, another name for a tight foreskin, often resolves itself naturally during childhood, it can sometimes cause pain or recurrent infections. In this informative guide, highly respected consultant paediatric surgeon Mr Brian MacCormack gives expert insight on when a tight foreskin requires treatment and the importance of self-retraction techniques.

 

What is phimosis?

 

Phimosis simply means a tight foreskin. For many boys throughout early childhood this is entirely normal - a physiological phimosis.

 

 

How does phimosis affect a child’s quality of life?

 

For most boys, a tight foreskin causes little in the way of symptoms. Ballooning of the foreskin during passage of urine is very common and actually part of the normal way the foreskin stretches and loosens up from the head of the penis.

 

Some boys can have recurrent pain and infections, whilst older boys can complain of painful erections. In some boys the foreskin becomes very scarred and abnormal - a condition called BXO (balanitis xerotica obliterans).

 

 

How is phimosis treated?

 

Most cases of physiological phimosis will resolve spontaneously as the boy gets older. For boys whose symptoms are more troublesome a six week course of steroid ointment can be helpful.

 

For the most part, the key is good self-retraction technique every time a boy tries to pass urine. It is important to note that if BXO is suspected the usual treatment would be a circumcision.

 

 

What’s involved in phimosis surgery?

 

In cases of BXO, a circumcision is the treatment of choice. In children this usually involves a general anaesthetic and careful removal of the foreskin, stopping any bleeding, and closing the two edges of the skin with dissolving stitches.

 

In carefully selected, motivated, older boys without BXO an alternative procedure called a preputioplasty can be very successful. In a preputioplasty the foreskin is widened rather than removed.

 

 

What’s involved in phimosis surgery recovery?

 

Antibacterial ointment is applied to the area twice daily for one week. Regular simple pain relief will be required for five to seven days and most boys should be back to normal within a week or two. Following a preputioplasty, it is critical that self-retraction of the foreskin starts forty-eight hours after the procedure.

 

 

 

Mr Brian MacCormack is one of Northern Ireland’s leading consultant paediatric surgeons. If you are concerned about your child’s foreskin problems and wish to book a consultation with Mr MacCormack, you can do by visiting his Top Doctor’s profile.

Mr Brian MacCormack

By Mr Brian MacCormack
Paediatric surgery

Mr Brian MacCormack is a consultant paediatric surgeon based in Northern Ireland, who specialises in tight foreskin (phimosis), undescended testicles and hernia, as well as tongue tie, endoscopy (camera tests) in children and cholecystectomy in children up to 16 years old. He privately practices at the Kingsbridge Private Hospital, Kingsbridge Maypole Clinic and Kingsbridge Private Hospital North West, while he also practices at various Western Health and Social Care Trust hospitals.     

Mr MacCormack works to improve the minimally-invasive treatment of children and neonates. He has consolidated his training in Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Belfast along with a fellowship in Auckland. Thanks to this, he has developed advanced techniques in minimally-invasive pyloromyotomy, duodenal atresia repair, and oesophageal atresia repair. In the next three years, he will have developed proficiency in laparoscopic colectomy for inflammatory bowel disease. 

Additionally, Mr MacCormack aims to innovate and improve the processes within the department where he works. His quality improvement projects such as the creation of an electronic operative note platform have been extremely rewarding. Collaborative safety and quality improvement projects will form a core component of his consultant practice and he will complete one such project per year. 

Mr MacCormack wishes to enhance the outcomes for children and neonates in the future by delivering exceptional teaching and training throughout his consultant practice. Designing and delivering a broad and robust teaching portfolio to trainees was one of the most rewarding components of his fellowship year in Auckland. Currently, he is a clinical supervisor. 

Mr MacCormack is highly respected by his peers, who nominated him and he was subsequently awarded for his contribution to excellence in postgraduate clinical education in the Belfast Health & Social Care Trust (2021–22).  Mr MacCormack's clinical research has been published in various peer-reviewed journals, and he is a member of the British Association of Paediatric Surgeons (BAPS). 


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