Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
The Bladder is an Important Organ
William Bromberg brombwi1 at memorialhealth.comFri Feb 1 21:43:27 GMT 2008
- Previous message: The Bladder is an Important Organ
- Next message: The Bladder is an Important Organ
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
My indications I will perform a handheld RUG for 1. blood at the meatus. 2. high riding prostate 3. Findings on plain film that make me worry that fractures could have gone near the urethra (vague, yes, sorry) I will perform a cystogram (plain film full and empty) for 1. gross hematuria or 2. no urine obtained on foley placement in patient with pelvic fractures These patients usually go to CT scan afterwards (if stable and no obvious intraperitoneal bladder rupture on cysto). Sometimes CT will pick up small EP leaks that don't get seen on plain film. Bill Bromberg >>> "caesar ursic" <cmursic at gmail.com> 2/1/2008 2:01 PM >>> (FYI: January is Bladder Health and Injury Prevention Month.) Two question for the group: 1. When do you specifically screen for bladder injuries in your polytraumatized (blunt) patients? 2. How do you do it? A. CT scan. Do you clamp the urinary catheter first? Do you instill contrast into the bladder prior to scanning? B. Retrograde cystogram (i.e. instilling contrast via the bladder catheter and shooting plain films)? C. Other? Many Thanks, etc. C Ursic, MD Santa Fe, USA -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/
- Previous message: The Bladder is an Important Organ
- Next message: The Bladder is an Important Organ
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
