Objective We aim to explore variation of the injected water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters on bladder spasm and blood urine in patients after transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate (TUPKVP). Methods We included 90 patients who had benign prostatic hyperplasia and received transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate in the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University from July 2018 to July 2019. They were averagely randomized into three groups: control group, experimental group A and experimental group B. We injected 30 ml of water into the air sacs of urinary catheters of patients postoperatively. At the first day after operation, the water was reduced to 20 ml in experimental group A, 10 ml in experimental group B, and the water volume in control group remained unchanged. The bladder spasm, blood urine and comfort level in three groups were analyzed comparatively. Results Nursing intervention of reducing injected water volume resulted in a lower incidence of bladder spasm in experimental group B than those in other two groups with 10% on the day of surgery, 3.3% at the second day postoperatively and no bladder spasm at the third day after operation. There was a significant difference in the incidence of bladder spasm between the three groups (χ2=19.449, P=0.000; χ2=6.469, P=0.040; χ2=8.314, P=0.013). Blood urine was milder in experimental group B than that in other two groups at the third day postoperatively with significant difference (χ2=6.796, P=0.037). Patients in experimental group B felt more comfortable than those in other two groups with a rate of comfort up to 70%. There was a significant difference in it between three groups (χ2=9.600, P=0.008). Conclusions For patients who underwent transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate, when continuous bladder irrigation and analgesia are withdrawn, reduction of water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters to 10ml can relieve the constriction of the bladder outlet and rubbing bladder mucosa and prostatic fossa and thus reduce the incidence of bladder spasm and blood urine and increase comfort level.
Published in | International Journal of Clinical Urology (Volume 4, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13 |
Page(s) | 13-16 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate, Indwelling Urinary Catheter, Volume of Air Sac, Nursing Intervention
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APA Style
Hong Caimei, Guo Xiaoxia, Li Qiufeng, Yang Qi, Chao Xinghui, et al. (2020). Effect of Variation of Volume of Injected Water in the Air Sacs of Urinary Catheters on Bladder Spasm After Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate. International Journal of Clinical Urology, 4(1), 13-16. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13
ACS Style
Hong Caimei; Guo Xiaoxia; Li Qiufeng; Yang Qi; Chao Xinghui, et al. Effect of Variation of Volume of Injected Water in the Air Sacs of Urinary Catheters on Bladder Spasm After Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate. Int. J. Clin. Urol. 2020, 4(1), 13-16. doi: 10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13
AMA Style
Hong Caimei, Guo Xiaoxia, Li Qiufeng, Yang Qi, Chao Xinghui, et al. Effect of Variation of Volume of Injected Water in the Air Sacs of Urinary Catheters on Bladder Spasm After Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate. Int J Clin Urol. 2020;4(1):13-16. doi: 10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13
@article{10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13, author = {Hong Caimei and Guo Xiaoxia and Li Qiufeng and Yang Qi and Chao Xinghui and Ba Longhong}, title = {Effect of Variation of Volume of Injected Water in the Air Sacs of Urinary Catheters on Bladder Spasm After Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate}, journal = {International Journal of Clinical Urology}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {13-16}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijcu.20200401.13}, abstract = {Objective We aim to explore variation of the injected water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters on bladder spasm and blood urine in patients after transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate (TUPKVP). Methods We included 90 patients who had benign prostatic hyperplasia and received transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate in the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University from July 2018 to July 2019. They were averagely randomized into three groups: control group, experimental group A and experimental group B. We injected 30 ml of water into the air sacs of urinary catheters of patients postoperatively. At the first day after operation, the water was reduced to 20 ml in experimental group A, 10 ml in experimental group B, and the water volume in control group remained unchanged. The bladder spasm, blood urine and comfort level in three groups were analyzed comparatively. Results Nursing intervention of reducing injected water volume resulted in a lower incidence of bladder spasm in experimental group B than those in other two groups with 10% on the day of surgery, 3.3% at the second day postoperatively and no bladder spasm at the third day after operation. There was a significant difference in the incidence of bladder spasm between the three groups (χ2=19.449, P=0.000; χ2=6.469, P=0.040; χ2=8.314, P=0.013). Blood urine was milder in experimental group B than that in other two groups at the third day postoperatively with significant difference (χ2=6.796, P=0.037). Patients in experimental group B felt more comfortable than those in other two groups with a rate of comfort up to 70%. There was a significant difference in it between three groups (χ2=9.600, P=0.008). Conclusions For patients who underwent transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate, when continuous bladder irrigation and analgesia are withdrawn, reduction of water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters to 10ml can relieve the constriction of the bladder outlet and rubbing bladder mucosa and prostatic fossa and thus reduce the incidence of bladder spasm and blood urine and increase comfort level.}, year = {2020} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Effect of Variation of Volume of Injected Water in the Air Sacs of Urinary Catheters on Bladder Spasm After Transurethral Plasmakentic Vaporization of Prostate AU - Hong Caimei AU - Guo Xiaoxia AU - Li Qiufeng AU - Yang Qi AU - Chao Xinghui AU - Ba Longhong Y1 - 2020/02/12 PY - 2020 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13 DO - 10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13 T2 - International Journal of Clinical Urology JF - International Journal of Clinical Urology JO - International Journal of Clinical Urology SP - 13 EP - 16 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2640-1355 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcu.20200401.13 AB - Objective We aim to explore variation of the injected water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters on bladder spasm and blood urine in patients after transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate (TUPKVP). Methods We included 90 patients who had benign prostatic hyperplasia and received transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate in the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University from July 2018 to July 2019. They were averagely randomized into three groups: control group, experimental group A and experimental group B. We injected 30 ml of water into the air sacs of urinary catheters of patients postoperatively. At the first day after operation, the water was reduced to 20 ml in experimental group A, 10 ml in experimental group B, and the water volume in control group remained unchanged. The bladder spasm, blood urine and comfort level in three groups were analyzed comparatively. Results Nursing intervention of reducing injected water volume resulted in a lower incidence of bladder spasm in experimental group B than those in other two groups with 10% on the day of surgery, 3.3% at the second day postoperatively and no bladder spasm at the third day after operation. There was a significant difference in the incidence of bladder spasm between the three groups (χ2=19.449, P=0.000; χ2=6.469, P=0.040; χ2=8.314, P=0.013). Blood urine was milder in experimental group B than that in other two groups at the third day postoperatively with significant difference (χ2=6.796, P=0.037). Patients in experimental group B felt more comfortable than those in other two groups with a rate of comfort up to 70%. There was a significant difference in it between three groups (χ2=9.600, P=0.008). Conclusions For patients who underwent transurethral plasmakentic vaporization of prostate, when continuous bladder irrigation and analgesia are withdrawn, reduction of water volume in the air sacs of indwelling urinary catheters to 10ml can relieve the constriction of the bladder outlet and rubbing bladder mucosa and prostatic fossa and thus reduce the incidence of bladder spasm and blood urine and increase comfort level. VL - 4 IS - 1 ER -