Surgical outcomes of bladder neck surgery in children with neurogenic bladder. Consequences on bladder voiding.
Surgical outcomes of bladder neck surgery in children with neurogenic bladder: Quality of voiding: spontaneous, need for catheterization, or incontinence. Other surgical complications.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
48
ULorraine
Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, Grand Est, France
Number of participants with delayed or incomplete opening of the bladder neck during the voiding phase of micturition impeding urine flow
Cysto-urethrogram and uroflowmetry help diagnose delayed or incomplete opening of the bladder neck. delayed or incomplete opening of the bladder neck
Time frame: Baseline (Before surgery)
Number of participants with muscular bladder
The muscular bladder has thicker walls, bladder diverticula and trabecules (diagnosed during abdominal ultrasound, urethro-cystogram and cystoscopy)
Time frame: Baseline (Before surgery)
Length of stay
Length of stay
Time frame: From admission to discharge home, up to 20 days
The time length between the surgery date and the postoperative consultation date
Follow\_up represents the time length between the surgery date and the postoperative consultation date in days, months, or years. Generally, there are a-month-follow-up, a three month-follow-up, a six month-follow-up, and a year-follow-up. The surgeon can see the patient if there is any problem between these consultations. After a year of follow-up, it is up to the surgeon to decide if the patient needs to be seen yearly or not. The last follow-up date is crucial because it indicates how the patient is and if other follow-up dates need to be applied.
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 2 years
Surgical complications after bladder neck procedure
bleeding, bowel obstruction, surgical hernia, urinary stone, urinary infection
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 2 years
Operating time
Operating time
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Time frame: Intraoperative