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TRAUMA: LOWER URINARY TRACT

Includes 2020 AUA Guideline Notes on Urotrauma

See Upper Urinary Tract Trauma Chapter Notes

Bladder Injury
Urethral injury

External Genitalia Injury

 

Penisfraktur 01

Swollen, ecchymotic, and deviated penis of a patient with penile fracture

Souce: Wikipedia

 

 

Questions
  1. What percentage of traumatic bladder injuries are extraperitoneal? Intraperitoneal? Which is more likely with pelvic fracture?
  2. What are the indications for imaging in a stable patient with suspected bladder trauma?
  3. What are clinical indicators of bladder rupture?
  4. In an unconscious patient, what is the minimum volume that should be instilled into the bladder on CT cystography to rule out injury?
  5. What proportion of patients with bladder injury also have urethral injury?
  6. What is the management of bladder injury?
  7. When is cystography needed following management of bladder injury?
  8. As per the AUA Guidelines on Urotrauma, what are the indications for immediate surgical treatment of an extraperitoneal bladder injury?
  9. What clinical findings are suggestive of urethral trauma?
  10. What is the next step in management of a patient with suspected urethral injury?
  11. Describe how a retrograde urethrogram is performed in a patient with suspected urethral trauma.
  12. Retrograde imaging demonstrates posterior urethral disruption in the context of a pelvic fracture. What is the recommended management?
  13. What are potential complications of urethral injury?
  14. Retrograde imaging demonstrates anterior urethral disruption in the context of penetrating trauma. What is the preferred management?
  15. Retrograde imaging demonstrates anterior urethral disruption in the context of straddle trauma. What is the preferred management?
  16. What is the earliest timing that urethral reconstruction should take place after PFUI?
  17. Which part of the urethra is most likely to be injured in a straddle injury?
  18. What are the benefits to surgical repair of suspected penile fracture? Up to how many days after fracture should surgical repair still be considered?
  19. What are the benefits of early exploration and repair of testicular injury
Answers
  1. What percentage of traumatic bladder injuries are extraperitoneal? Intraperitoneal? Which is more likely with pelvic fracture?
    • 60% extraperitoneal, 30% intraperitoneal, 10% both
    • Extraperitoneal
  2. What are the indications for imaging in a stable patient with suspected bladder trauma?
    • MUST: gross hematuria with pelvic fracture
    • Should: gross hematuria with mechanism concerning for bladder injury OR pelvic fracture and clinical indicators of bladder rupture
  3. What are clinical indicators of bladder rupture?
    1. Gross hematuria
    2. Abdominal distention
    3. Lower abdominal bruising
    4. Suprapubic pain
    5. Muscle guarding and rigidity
    6. Inability to void
    7. Low urine output
    8. Diminished bowel sounds
    9. Increased BUN and creatinine secondary to peritoneal absorption of urine
    10. Low density free intraperitoneal fluid on abdominal imaging (urinary ascites)
  4. In an unconscious patient, what is the minimum volume that should be instilled into the bladder on CT cystography to rule out injury?
    • 300mL
  5. What proportion of patients with bladder injury also have urethral injury?
    • 10-30%
  6. What is the management of bladder injury?
    • Intraperitoneal bladder rupture: surgical repair
    • Extraperitoneal bladder rupture: foley catheter drainage x2-3 weeks, may need for longer
  7. When is cystography needed following management of bladder injury?
    • Extraperitoneal: should be done in complex repairs but may not be needed in simple repairs
    • Intraperitoneal: should be done
  8. As per the AUA Guidelines on Urotrauma, what are the indications for immediate surgical treatment of an extraperitoneal bladder injury?
    1. Exposed bone spicules in the bladder lumen
    2. Concurrent rectal or vaginal lacerations
    3. Bladder neck injuries
    4. Patient is undergoing open reduction internal fixation
    5. Patient is undergoing repair of abdominal injuries
  9. What clinical findings are suggestive of urethral trauma?
    1. Blood at the meatus
    2. Inability to urinate
    3. Perineal/genital ecchymosis
    4. High-riding prostate on physical exam
  10. What is the next step in management of a patient with suspected urethral injury?
    • Retrograde urethrogram
  11. Describe how a retrograde urethrogram is performed in a patient with suspected urethral trauma.
    • Patient is positioned obliquely with bottom leg flexed at the knee and the top leg kept straight
    • 12Fr catheter or catheter tip syringe is placed in the fossa navicularis
    • 20mL of undiluted water soluble contrast is injected
    • Image is acquired
  12. Retrograde imaging demonstrates posterior urethral disruption in the context of a pelvic fracture. What is the recommended management?
    • Suprapubic tube with delayed repair
  13. What are potential complications of urethral injury?
    • Urethral stenosis, incontinence, erectile dysfunction
  14. Retrograde imaging demonstrates anterior urethral disruption in the context of penetrating trauma. What is the preferred management?
    • Prompt surgical repair
  15. Retrograde imaging demonstrates anterior urethral disruption in the context of straddle trauma. What is the preferred management?
    • Prompt urinary drainage
  16. What is the earliest timing that urethral reconstruction should take place after PFUI?
  17. Which part of the urethra is most likely to be injured in a straddle injury?
  18. What are the benefits to surgical repair of suspected penile fracture? Up to how many days after fracture should surgical repair still be considered?
  19. What are the benefits of early exploration and repair of testicular injury
References