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Postpartum urinary retention: what are the sequelae? A long-term study and review of the literature
by
Mohr, Stefan
, Gobrecht-Keller, Ursula
, Mueller, Michael D
, Raio, Luigi
, Kuhn, Annette
, Imboden, Sara
in
Birth weight
/ Bladder
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Catheters
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Gynecology
/ Intubation
/ Morbidity
/ Obstetrics
/ Pathophysiology
/ Patients
/ Urinary retention
/ Urine
/ Urogenital system
/ Vagina
/ Womens health
2022
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Postpartum urinary retention: what are the sequelae? A long-term study and review of the literature
by
Mohr, Stefan
, Gobrecht-Keller, Ursula
, Mueller, Michael D
, Raio, Luigi
, Kuhn, Annette
, Imboden, Sara
in
Birth weight
/ Bladder
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Catheters
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Gynecology
/ Intubation
/ Morbidity
/ Obstetrics
/ Pathophysiology
/ Patients
/ Urinary retention
/ Urine
/ Urogenital system
/ Vagina
/ Womens health
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Postpartum urinary retention: what are the sequelae? A long-term study and review of the literature
by
Mohr, Stefan
, Gobrecht-Keller, Ursula
, Mueller, Michael D
, Raio, Luigi
, Kuhn, Annette
, Imboden, Sara
in
Birth weight
/ Bladder
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Catheters
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Gynecology
/ Intubation
/ Morbidity
/ Obstetrics
/ Pathophysiology
/ Patients
/ Urinary retention
/ Urine
/ Urogenital system
/ Vagina
/ Womens health
2022
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Postpartum urinary retention: what are the sequelae? A long-term study and review of the literature
Journal Article
Postpartum urinary retention: what are the sequelae? A long-term study and review of the literature
2022
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Overview
Introduction and hypothesisPostpartum urinary retention (PUR) may cause long-term urogenital tract morbidity. The incidence ranges from 0.18 to 14.6%, but the importance of prompt diagnosis and appropriate management is often underappreciated. The paucity of data on long-term outcome after PUR contributes to these drawbacks. The aim of this study was to assess long-term persistence of elevated PVR (post-void residual urine) volume after PUR. Pathophysiology, risk factors and management of PUR are reviewed.MethodsIn our tertiary referral urogynecology unit in the University Women’s Hospital of Bern, Switzerland, all patients who were referred for PUR were asked to participate in this study. PVR was measured sonographically every 2 days until day 15, then after 6, 12, 24 and 36 months and, if increased, the patients were instructed to perform clean intermittent self-catheterization. If retention persisted longer than the lactation period, multichannel urodynamics was performed.ResultsSixty-two patients were included. The median PVR normalized at day 7. Long-term voiding disorders were found in 8.2%, 6.7%, and 4.9% after 1, 2, and 3 years respectively. Multichannel urodynamics confirmed in all patients with persisting retention an acontractile detrusor and de novo stress urinary incontinence in 4 cases. Quantile regression did not reveal any factor contributing to earlier recovery. Eighty-nine percent of the patients with PUR had operative vaginal deliveries, emphasizing the importance of this risk factor for PUR.ConclusionsIn most cases PUR resolves early, but voiding difficulties persist more often than previously thought, and for these patients the consequences are devastating. Obstetric awareness, early active management, and developing management strategies in the postpartum period might preclude lower urinary tract morbidity.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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