Literature DB >> 16430039

[Outpatient surgical treatment of female stress urinary incontinence].

Pedro Navalón Verdejo1, Cristóbal Zaragozá Fernández, Felipe Ordoño Domínguez, Francisco Sánchez Ballester, Joaquín Juan Escudero, Milagros Fabuel Deltoro, Luis De la Torre Abril, Emilio López Alcina.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the results of the outpatient surgical treatment of genuine female stress urinary incontinence (SUI) over a five year period since the integration of the Department of Urology in the Ambulatory Surgery Unit at our hospital "Consorcio Hospital General Universitario de Valencia" (CHGUV).
METHODS: Between January 2000 and December 2004 26 patients (ages 49-78; mean age 69.8 yr) with the diagnosis of SUI underwent tension-free suburethral mesh sling (TVT) outpatient operations under local anesthesia-sedation at the ambulatory surgery unit of the CHGUV. All patients had clinical and urodynamic evaluation, excluding those presenting genital prolapse or non compliance with the social requirements for ambulatory surgery. Previous anti-incontinence surgery was not an exclusion criterion. We evaluate inclusion and discharge criteria, results and satisfaction degree measured by a questionnaire.
RESULTS: 22 patients (85%) had genuine SUI and 4 (15%) had mixed UI with predominance of the stress component. 54% (14) of the patients were ASA I, 31% (8) ASA II, and 15% (4) well compensated ASA III. Operation tolerance under local anesthesia (20-30 ml 1% lidocaine) was good in all patients, having used additional sedation-analgesia (propofol-remifentanil IV perfusion) in 10 of them (38%). Mean operative time was 30 minutes (25-45) and stay at the unit discharge was 100 min. (80-140). All patients were discharged the same day. None of them required readmission or presented urinary retention after catheter removal. SUI disappeared in all of them. Three patients presented postoperative urge incontinence responsive to oral anticolinergic drugs. Our results are similar to those obtained with epidural anesthesia and hospital admission, being the degree of satisfaction with treatment higher than 95%.
CONCLUSIONS: The development of new, revolutionary systems for the treatment of SUI has simplified the surgical treatment of this entity, so that we can say a high percentage of patients may be included in an ambulatory surgery program, significantly improving cost-efficacy without diminishment of health-care quality or patient satisfaction.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16430039     DOI: 10.4321/s0004-06142005000900008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Esp Urol        ISSN: 0004-0614            Impact factor:   0.436


  1 in total

1.  A Twelve-Year Experience in Ambulatory Surgery within Urology.

Authors:  Pedro Navalón; Yoni Pallás; Victor Navalón; Felipe Ordoño; Elisa Monllor
Journal:  ISRN Urol       Date:  2012-02-16
  1 in total

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