Bladder trauma
Revision as of 03:19, 3 July 2016 by Neil.m.young (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "fx " to "fracture ")
Background
Clinical Presentation
- Suprapubic pain, blood at meatus, inability to void
- Gross hematuria is present in 95% of significant bladder injuries
- Pelvic fracture + gross hematuria = bladder rupture
- <1% of all blunt bladder injuries p/w UA w/ <25 RBCs/HPF
- Bladder Rupture
- Extraperitoneal
- Assoc w/ pelvic fracture and laceration by bony fragments
- Leakage of urine into perivesicular space
- "Tear drop" shape on imaging
- Intraperitoneal
- Assoc w/ compresive force in presence of full bladder
- Extraperitoneal
Diagnosis
- Imaging
- Retrograde cystogram (CT or plain film) indicated for:
- Gross hematuria
- Inability to void
- Pelvic fracture in assoc w/ microscopic hematuria
- Clinical suspicion of bladder injury
- CT A/P w/ IV contrast NOT sensitive enough for bladder rupture
Differential Diagnosis
Genitourinary Trauma
- Urinary system
- Genital
- Other
- Child abuse
- Pelvic fracture (often accompanies)
- Sexual assault
Management
- Extraperitoneal Rupture
- Nonoperative management w/ bladder cathether drainage
- Intraperitoneal Rupture
- Operative management
