Treatment of urinary complications after total joint replacement in elderly females

Urinary retention and the possible consequence of infection after total joint replacement is an important subject to urologists and orthopedic surgeons. A prospective, randomized study was performed in 77 elderly female patients with total joint replacement to test whether twenty-four-hour catheteri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urology (Ridgewood, N.J.) N.J.), 1988-09, Vol.32 (3), p.186-188
Hauptverfasser: Carpiniello, Victor L., Cendron, Marc, Altman, Howard G., Malloy, Terrence R., Booth, Robert
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Urinary retention and the possible consequence of infection after total joint replacement is an important subject to urologists and orthopedic surgeons. A prospective, randomized study was performed in 77 elderly female patients with total joint replacement to test whether twenty-four-hour catheterization preooperatively or straight catheterization postoperatively in the recovery room might reduce the control group's incidence of postoperative urinary tract infection (9 %), urinary retention (57 %), and subsequent urinary catheterizations. In 16 percent of the patients who had straight catheterization in the recovery room a urinary tract infection developed postoperatively, and 65 percent of these patients required at least one more catheterization with 13 percent requiring a subsequent indwelling Foley catheter. The patients who had perioperative (immediately preoperatively and for 24 hours postoperatively) catheter drainage had a zero incidence of retention and only a 4 percent incidence of urinary tract infection. We recommend this regimen for elderly female patients undergoing total joint replacement under spinal anesthesia.
ISSN:0090-4295
1527-9995
DOI:10.1016/0090-4295(88)90381-0