The Effect of Catheter Valve Vs. Standard Catheter Removal in Outpatients
Urinary Retention
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Urinary Retention focused on measuring Urinary retention, trial removal of catheter, valve
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Men aged 60-85 catheterised for urinary retention and booked for outpatient removal of catheter
- Mobile patients
Exclusion Criteria:
- Who cannot consent
- Residual urine of more then 1 litre
- Abnormal renal functions
- Poor manual dexterity
- Learning difficulties/dementia.
Sites / Locations
- Medway NHS Foundation TrustRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Experimental
Without valve
With valve
Trial removal of catheter without catheter valve in patients with urinary retention. These are those patients who have catheter on free drainage, attend the clinic for catheter removal and bladder to be filled naturally ( which may take upto 4-5 hours). After removal of catheter they will be asked to drink plenty of fluids while waiting for the bladder to fill up. This is the traditional method of catheter removal.
Trial removal of catheter in patients with urinary retention with closed catheter valve. These patients will be asked to close the valve 3-4 hours before attending the clinic prior to catheter removal. Here the intervention is catheter valve that allows bladder to be comfortably full by the time patient arrives in the clinic. By this intervention the investigators hypothesise that the investigators can save the clinic time as the patient will not need to wait for natural bladder filling which generally takes 4-5 hours. Intervention: Urinary catheter valve