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Re: Milk in the bladderFrom: timothy fitzpatrick (tfitzob@massmed.org)Sun Jul 28 17:58:49 1996
>>What about looking into the cathether bag before starting and closing? >>You cut the bladder it bleeds, doesn't it? So if the urine was clear at start >>you know you got to look. If it is clean at end you should be safe... >> >>el > >Sometimes clear urine means no holes in bladder. sometimes bloody urine >means no holes too, compression with valves can make the blader bleed. >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- >Francisco L. Romero. MD, S.E.G.O. member. >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sorry for including bits of both post but both surgeons have a point . I would only add to this discussion that any concern about the bladder requires something to be done at the time of surgery to establish bladder integrity and this is essentially the same concern in hysterectomy as it is in C-section.We use methelyene Blue instilled from the catheter from below. I have never seen milk used in new england but Dr Nichols mentions it still at every lecture. Timothy Kelly Fitzpatrick LRCSIre MBBCH. Baystate Medical Centre springfield Ma. USA
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