Acute urinary retention
Background
- Urologic emergency characterized by sudden inability to pass urine
- Most common cause is benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)
- Rare in women
Clinical Features
- Suprapubic abdominal distention and/or pain
- Frequency, urgency, hesitancy, dribbling, decrease in voiding stream
Differential Diagnosis
Urinary retention
- Obstructive causes
- BPH
- Prostate cancer
- Blood clot
- Urethral Stricture
- Bladder Calculi
- Bladder neoplasm
- Foreign body, urethral or bladder
- Ovarian/uterine tumor
- Incarcerated uterus
- Neurogenic causes
- Multiple sclerosis
- Parkinson's
- Brain tumor
- Cerebral vascular disease
- Cauda equina syndrome
- Spinal cord compression (non-traumatic)
- Intervertebral disk herniation
- Neuropathy
- Nerve injury from pelvic surgery
- Postoperative retention
- Trauma
- Urethral injury
- Bladder injury
- Spinal cord injury
- Extraurinary causes
- Perirectal or pelvic abscesses
- Rectal or retroperitoneal masses
- Fecal impaction
- Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
- Psychogenic causes
- Psychosexual stress
- Acute anxiety
- Infection
- Cystitis
- Prostatitis
- Herpes Simplex (genital)
- Herpes Zoster involving pelvic region
- Local Abscess
- PID
- Meds
- Anticholinergics
- Antihistamines
- Cold meds
- Sympathomimetics
- TCA
- Muscle relaxants
- Opioids
Abdominal distention
- Obesity
- Intestinal obstruction
- Pregnancy
- Ascites
- Cirrhosis
- Malignancy
- Heart failure
- Tuberculosis
- Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Peritoneal dialysis-associated peritonitis
- Distended bladder / Acute urinary retention
- Constipation / fecal impaction
- Large tumor(s) (e.g. ovarian, lymphoma)
- Organomegaly
Evaluation
- UA/Urine cultures
- Chemistry
- CBC (if suspect infection or massive hematuria)
- Bedside ultrasound (to verify retention)
- Incomplete retention is PVR > 50ml and > 100ml in patients > 65 years of age[1]
- Post-void residual of 150-200 cc is particularly concerning
Management
Bladder Decompression
- Urethral catheterization
- Pass 14-18F Foley catheter (larger if blood clots)
- Rate of decompression: rapid complete drainage
- At one time, rapid complete bladder decompression was thought to increase the rate of potential complications, however partial drainage and clamping does not reduce these complications and may increase risk for UTI[2]
- If unable to pass Foley, consider:
- Coude catheter
- Suprapubic catheterization
Other Considerations
- Blood clot
- Use 20-24F triple-lumen catheter to irrigate bladder until clear
- Consider α-blocker as outpatient if concern for BPH (e.g. tamsulosin 0.4mg QHS)
- Results in significant increase in voiding success
- Possibility of orthostatic hypotension
- Urology consult
- Consider for precipitated retention (e.g. stricture, prostatitis, cancer) or need for suprapubic catheterization
Disposition
Admission
Consider for:
- Post-obstructive diuresis >200mL/hr for 2 hours or 3L over 24 hours
- Elevated BUN/Cr (acute renal failure)
- Significant hematuria or clot retention
- New neurologic cause (e.g. cord compression)
Discharge
- Otherwise consider discharge with catheter placed to leg bag and urology follow up within 1 week
See Also
References
- Shenot PJ. Urinary Retention. Merck Manual. August 2014. http://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/genitourinary-disorders/voiding-disorders/urinary-retention
- Management of urinary retention: rapid versus gradual decompression and risk of complications
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