| Literature DB >> 26383168 |
Roger C L Feneley1, Ian B Hopley2, Peter N T Wells3.
Abstract
For more than 3500 years, urinary catheters have been used to drain the bladder when it fails to empty. For people with impaired bladder function and for whom the method is feasible, clean intermittent self-catheterization is the optimal procedure. For those who require an indwelling catheter, whether short- or long-term, the self-retaining Foley catheter is invariably used, as it has been since its introduction nearly 80 years ago, despite the fact that this catheter can cause bacterial colonization, recurrent and chronic infections, bladder stones and septicaemia, damage to the kidneys, the bladder and the urethra, and contribute to the development of antibiotic resistance. In terms of medical, social and economic resources, the burden of urinary retention and incontinence, aggravated by the use of the Foley catheter, is huge. In the UK, the harm resulting from the use of the Foley catheter costs the National Health Service between £1.0-2.5 billion and accounts for ∼2100 deaths per year. Therefore, there is an urgent need for the development of an alternative indwelling catheter system. The research agenda is for the new catheter to be easy and safe to insert, either urethrally or suprapubically, to be retained reliably in the bladder and to be withdrawn easily and safely when necessary, to mimic natural physiology by filling at low pressure and emptying completely without damage to the bladder, and to have control mechanisms appropriate for all users.Entities:
Keywords: Urinary catheters; adverse events; biomaterials; infection; research agenda
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26383168 PMCID: PMC4673556 DOI: 10.3109/03091902.2015.1085600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Eng Technol ISSN: 0309-1902
Some important events in the history of the development of the urinary catheter.
| Date | Devices and comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 1500 BC | Earliest record in an ancient Egyptian papyrus (the Ebers papyrus) of treatment of urinary retention by means of transurethral bronze tubes, reeds, straws and curled-up palm leaves. | Hanafy et al. [ |
| 400 BC | References in Hippocratic writings to the use of malleable lead tubes. | Milne [ |
| 79 AD | An S-shaped silver tube was found during the excavation of Pompei, evidently for the treatment of urinary retention. | Nacey and Delahunt [ |
| 900s | Malleable silver tube with numerous side holes which, according to Albucasis (Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi) (936–1013), apparently resulted in easier insertion. | Hanafy et al. [ |
| 1100s | Chinese records of the treatment of urinary retention by transurethral insertion of hollow leaves of onion ( | Herman [ |
| 1500s | First record by Fabricius of Acquapendente (1537–1619) of indwelling wax-impregnated cloth catheter moulded on silver sound, to reduce incidence of damage due to repeated catheterization. | Murphy [ |
| 1564 | Ambroise Paré (1510–1590) devised a silver tube with a long gentle curve for easier insertion. | Paré [ |
| 1600s | Jan-Baptiste van Helmont (1578–1644) described a chamois skin catheter impregnated with white lead and linseed oil, inserted over a whalebone stylet. Later, wound silver wire was used to prevent collapse, with external grooves filled with wax, tallow or bound with fine gut. Putrefaction of the chamois skin was a major problem. | Murphy [ |
| 1684 | Cornelius van Solingen (1641–1687) devised a silver wire helical tube covered with parchment held in place by silk thread and coated with wax. | Mattelaer and Billiet [ |
| 1700s | Jean Louis Petit (1674–1750) devised a silver tube with double curve. This device was less satisfactory than its immediate predecessors. | Petit [ |
| 1731 | Jacques de Garengeot (1688–1759) devised a silver tube with pronounced curve and fine stylet with small terminal rounded tip to occlude the lumen during insertion. | de Garengeot [ |
| 1750s | Theden of Berlin and Bernard of Paris independently used a natural rubber gum coating of silk closely wound over a brass sound, finished with varnish to overcome stickiness. However, the varnish soon cracked, there was no method for reliable retention and they soon became blocked by encrustation. | Murphy [ |
| 1752 | Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) devised a silver wire helical tube rubbed with tallow to fill the external grooves, for use as a catheter by his brother John when suffering from urinary retention due to “the stone”. Later, Benjamin Franklin used it personally when suffering from the same condition. | Nacey and Delahunt [ |
| 1836 | Louis Auguste Mercier (1811–1882) invented the coudé (elbow) catheter | Mattelaer and Billiet [ |
| 1841 | Mercier developed the bi-coudé (double elbow) catheter, with which insertion was much easier. | Mattelaer and Billiet [ |
| 1850s | Auguste Nétalon (1807–1873) developed a vulcanized rubber (latex) catheter, including the solid-tip and a single-eye. It was retained by adhesive tape or by a stitch (although neither method was satisfactory). | Mattelaer and Billiet [ |
| 1855 | Jean François Reybard (1795–1863) invented a self-retaining catheter, consisting of a device with two channels, one for draining the urine and the other to inflate a balloon close to the tip to retain the catheter in the bladder | Reybard [ |
| 1929 | Development of the “modern” balloon-based self-retaining catheter. In the device constructed by the C R Bard Company to the design of Dr Frederic Foley, a rubber balloon was attached with fine silk and waterproof cement close to the tip of a rubber catheter with a longitudinal groove which accommodated a fine tube to inflate the balloon with water. Bard placed Foley’s device on the market in 1933. Foley’s original application of his now-eponymous catheter was for post-prostatectomy haemostasis, but its wider application in the management of urinary incontinence and retention soon became commonplace, although the latex frequently caused urethritis and urethral strictures, and encrustration and infection were almost inevitable with longer-term catheterization. | Foley [ |
| 1968 | Introduction of catheters constructed from silicone elastomer, reducing the incidence of urethritis and the rates of encrustration and infection. | Mangelson et al. [ |
| 2001 | Introduction of chemical impregnation and “antimicrobial” coating, particularly silver, aimed at inhibiting the formation of surface biofilms and encrustation. These can reduce the risk of catheter-induced urinary tract infection, but only by 2–3 weeks. | Maki and Tambyah [ |
Figure 1. Tubular silver catheters devised by Ambroise Paré (1510–1590), with long gentle curves (they are known as coudé catheters) to permit easier insertion [8].
Figure 2. Urinary catheterization in the middle ages [17].
Figure 3. The urinary tract.
Figure 4. A typical Foley catheter. This catheter is size 16 Fr. Its overall length is ∼400 mm and the volume of the fully-inflated balloon is ∼10 ml. The catheter has two channels. When the catheter has been inserted, the retaining balloon is inflated with sterile water from a syringe via the inflation connector and one of the channels. The inflation connector incorporates a valve to prevent the sterile water from escaping when the syringe is detached. The other channel allows the free flow of urine from the drainage eye to the drainage funnel. To remove the catheter, the retaining balloon is first deflated by withdrawing the water from it with a syringe, which opens the valve in the inflation connector when it is attached.
Figure 5. The Foley catheter, introduced (a) Urethrally and (b) Suprapubically. In both cases, the bladder is shown to be draining continuously into a urine collection bag attached to the leg: this bag can be emptied when necessary by opening a valve. Alternatively, the bladder can be drained intermittently if a catheter valve is inserted into the drainage funnel of the catheter.
Figure 6. A section through a Foley catheter that has become blocked during use by the formation of struvite. The smaller patent lumen is the channel for the inflation and deflation of the retaining balloon. The length of the scale bar is 1 mm.
Figure 7. A catheter incorporating some of the concepts in the research agenda. The catheter is retained by wings which spring open after insertion through the suprapubic tract to the bladder: this traps less urine than the balloon of a Foley catheter and the catheter can be withdrawn transurethrally after cutting through it at the external suprapubic port. Multiple drainage eyes in the section of the catheter within the bladder minimize the risk of the formation of pseudopolyps, and this risk is further reduced by a collapsible section (shown stippled) of the catheter situated close to the external meatus of the urethra. The elastic reservoir at the suprapubic end of the catheter and strapped to the abdominal wall expands to accommodate urine from the bladder during spasmodic bladder contraction and returns it to the bladder when it relaxes after the spasm, thus minimizing the possibility of kidney damage. Periodic drainage of the bladder into a leg bag is actuated by a pinch valve beyond the collapsible section of the catheter, under manual or timed automatic control.