Untitled Slide
The most common urinary elimination problems involve the inability to store urine or to fully empty urine from the bladder. Problems can result from infection, irritable or overactive bladder, obstruction of urine flow, impaired bladder contractility, or issues that impair innervation to the bladder resulting in sensory or motor dysfunction.
Patients may have no urine output over several hours, and in some cases will experience frequency, urgency, small volume voiding or incontinence of small volumes of urine. Postvoid residual (PVR) is the amount of urine left in the bladder after voiding and is measured either by ultrasound or straight catheterization. Incontinence caused by urinary retention is called overflow incontinence or incontinence associated with chronic retention of urine. The pressure in the bladder exceeds the ability of the sphincter to prevent the passage of urine and the patient will dribble urine.
[Review Table 46-1, Urinary Incontinence, with students.]
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are usually caused by Escherichia coli. Urinary tract infections are characterized by location; upper urinary tract (kidney) or lower urinary tract (bladder, urethra) and have signs and symptoms of infection. Bacteriuria, or bacteria in the urine, does not always mean that there is an infection. Symptomatic infection of the bladder should be treated with antibiotics and can lead to a serious upper urinary tract infection (pyelonephritis) and life-threatening blood stream infection (bacteremia or urosepsis). Symptoms of a lower urinary tract infection (bladder) can include: burning or pain with urination (dysuria), irritation of the bladder (cystitis) characterized by urgency, frequency, incontinence, suprapubic tenderness, and foul-smelling cloudy urine. Catheter-associated UTIs (CAUTIs) are associated with increased hospitalizations, increased morbidity and mortality, longer hospital stays, and increased hospital costs. Because a CAUTI is common, costly, and believed to be reasonably preventable, as of October 1, 2008, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) chose it as one of the complications for which hospitals no longer receive additional payment to compensate for the extra cost of treatment. Consequently, there has been a shift in reimbursement practices from its traditional focus on early recognition and prompt treatment to one of prevention.
Common forms of UI are urge or urgency UI (involuntary leakage associated with urgency) and stress UI (involuntary loss of urine associated with effort or exertion, on sneezing or coughing. Mixed UI is when stress and urgency type symptoms are both present. Overactive bladder is defined as urinary urgency, often accompanied by increased urinary frequency and nocturia that may or may not be associated with urgency incontinence and is present without obvious bladder pathology or infection. Urinary incontinence associated with chronic retention of urine (formally called Overflow UI) is urine leakage caused by an overfull bladder. Functional UI is caused by factors that prohibit or interfere with a patient’s access to the toilet or other acceptable receptacle for urine. In most cases, there is no bladder pathology. It is a significant problem for older adults who experience problems with mobility or the dexterity to manage their clothing and toileting behaviors. A recently added category of incontinence is identified as Multifactorial incontinence. This describes incontinence that has multiple interacting risk factors, some within the urinary tract and others not, such as multiple chronic illnesses, medications, age-related factors, and environmental factors.