Approximately 40 % of all patients undergoing fast-track total hip or knee arthroplasty needs intermittent bladder catheterization after surgery, as they are transient incapable of voluntary bladder emptying (postoperative urinary retention - POUR). The currently used interventional threshold for urinary bladder catheterization are a bladder volume of approximately 500 ml., but no evidence exists for this threshold. At the same time, the current knowledge suggest, that a bladder volume up to 1000 ml. for 2-4 hours are safe in humans, and as the use of urinary bladder catheterization are increasing the risk of complications, the investigators are hypothesizing that increasing the interventional threshold for urinary bladder catheterization after fast-track total hip or knee arthroplasty, will reduce the number of patients needing urinary bladder catheterization, without increasing the incidence of urological complications - including urinary tract infections.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
800
Aalborg University Hospital, Farsoe
Farsø, Denmark
Department of Orthopaedics, Gentofte University Hospital
Hellerup, Denmark
Department of Orthopaedics, Vejle Hospital
Vejle, Denmark
Number of patients receiving postoperative urinary bladder catheterization
Time frame: Patients will be followed from end of surgery to their first voluntary micturition, expectably within a mean period of twelve hours
Incidence of urinary tract infections
Time frame: within the first 30 days after surgery
Number of voiding difficulties acquired postoperatively
Time frame: within the first 30 days postoperatively
Number of readmissions due to urological issues (including urosepsis)
Time frame: Within the first 30 days postoperatively
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