Bladder augmentation: Difference between revisions
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
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'''Bladder augmentation''' is a surgical alteration of the [[urinary bladder]]. It involves removing strips of tissue from the intestinal tract and adding this to the tissue of the bladder. This has two intended results: increased bladder volume; and a reduced percentage of the bladder involved in contraction, that in turn results in lower internal pressures in the bladder during urination. | '''Bladder augmentation''' is a surgical alteration of the [[urinary bladder]]. It involves removing strips of tissue from the intestinal tract and adding this to the tissue of the bladder. This has two intended results: increased bladder volume; and a reduced percentage of the bladder involved in contraction, that in turn results in lower internal pressures in the bladder during urination. | ||
Risks of bladder augmentation include incomplete voiding of the bladder post-surgery (resulting in the patient having to undergo intermittent | Risks of bladder augmentation include incomplete voiding of the bladder post-surgery (resulting in the patient having to undergo intermittent catheterization or an indwelling catheter), acute intestinal obstruction due to adhesion some years after surgery, and, in extremely rare cases, cancers of the intestinal tissue within the bladder. It must be stressed that this risk is very small, and some specialists still regard the link to cancer as a theoretical one. | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
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*[[Vesicouretic reflux]] | *[[Vesicouretic reflux]] | ||
*[[Hydronephrosis]] | *[[Hydronephrosis]] | ||
[[Category:Surgery]] | [[Category:Surgery]] | ||
[[Category:Urology]] | [[Category:Urology]] | ||
[[Category:Nephrology]] | [[Category:Nephrology]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 22:59, 8 August 2012
Template:Search infobox Steven C. Campbell, M.D., Ph.D.
Overview
Bladder augmentation is a surgical alteration of the urinary bladder. It involves removing strips of tissue from the intestinal tract and adding this to the tissue of the bladder. This has two intended results: increased bladder volume; and a reduced percentage of the bladder involved in contraction, that in turn results in lower internal pressures in the bladder during urination.
Risks of bladder augmentation include incomplete voiding of the bladder post-surgery (resulting in the patient having to undergo intermittent catheterization or an indwelling catheter), acute intestinal obstruction due to adhesion some years after surgery, and, in extremely rare cases, cancers of the intestinal tissue within the bladder. It must be stressed that this risk is very small, and some specialists still regard the link to cancer as a theoretical one.
History
This surgery has been popular in the 1980s and 1990s.