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Association of acute urinary retention in postoperative patients with a urinary catheter, with and without bladder catheter clamping

Arch Esp Urol. 2021 Oct;74(8):747-751.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The use of a temporaryor permanent catheter is very common in clinical practice. Between 15.0% and 25.0% of hospitalized patients have in-dwelling bladder catheters, the majority of which are short-term. Bladder catheter clamping before catheter removal was generally regarded as useful in the past. Today, its utility is questionable.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the association between bladder catheter clamping and spontaneous micturition or acute urinary retention (AUR) in postoperative patients with short-term indwelling bladder catheter.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A descriptive, comparative,longitudinal study was conducted at a secondary care hospital center in a western Mexican state .AUR was the outcome variable. Two study groups wereformed: patients with bladder catheter clamping (n=43) and the control patients with no bladder catheter clamping (n=41). Descriptive statistical analyses were performed, and percentage comparisons were made with the chi-squaretest. Significant predictors were subsequently added to the multivariate model.

RESULTS: Fourteen percent (n=12) of all the study patients, with and without bladder catheter clamping, presented with AUR and 86% (n=72) did not. In the association analysis, there was no statistically significant difference between presenting with AUR and having or not having bladder catheter clamping (p=0.59). The associations of AUR with bladder re-catheterization (p=0.001), age (p=0.01), and the presence of lower urinary symptoms (p= 0.005) were statistically significant.

CONCLUSION: Postoperative bladder catheter clamping was not associated with the presence of AUR.

PMID:34605414

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