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Related Experiment Videos

Management of bladder function after outpatient surgery.

D J Pavlin1, E G Pavlin, D R Fitzgibbon

  • 1Department of Anesthesiology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195, USA. jpavlin@u.washington.edu

Anesthesiology
|July 28, 1999
PubMed
Summary
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For low-risk patients undergoing outpatient surgery, voiding before discharge is not necessary. High-risk patients require continued observation to prevent bladder overdistention and manage urinary retention.

Area of Science:

  • Anesthesiology
  • Urology
  • Surgical Patient Management

Background:

  • Postoperative bladder function management is crucial after outpatient surgery.
  • Urinary retention can prolong hospital stays and cause patient discomfort.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate a treatment algorithm for managing bladder function post-anesthesia.
  • To determine the necessity of voiding before discharge in different risk categories.

Main Methods:

  • 324 outpatients were stratified into low-risk (categories 1-2) and high-risk (categories 3-4) groups.
  • Low-risk patients received varying intraoperative fluid volumes; high-risk patients had bladder volumes monitored.
  • Incidence of urinary retention and post-operative urinary tract symptoms were assessed.

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Main Results:

  • Urinary retention occurred in only 0.5% of low-risk patients not required to void before discharge.
  • High-risk patients experienced a 5% incidence of retention before discharge and 25% recurrence after.
  • Intraoperative fluid administration did not impact retention rates or voiding times.

Conclusions:

  • Voiding prior to discharge is unnecessary for reliable, low-risk outpatients.
  • High-risk patients necessitate continued monitoring to prevent bladder overdistention and manage retention.