Artigo Revisado por pares

Is the formation of a bladder flap at cesarean necessary? a randomized trial

2001; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 98; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0029-7844(01)01570-8

ISSN

1873-233X

Autores

Maria Hohlagschwandtner,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes

Resumo

To evaluate the effects of not forming a bladder flap at lower-segment cesarean delivery.A total of 102 women who underwent cesarean delivery were prospectively randomized to one of two groups. In the study group (n = 53), a cesarean was performed without formation of a bladder flap. In the control group (n = 49), cesarean was performed with formation of a bladder flap before the uterine incision.There were differences of median skin incision-delivery interval (5 versus 7 minutes, P <.001), median total operating time (35 versus 40 minutes, P =.004), and median blood loss (Delta hemoglobin 0.5 versus 1 g/dL, P =.009) in favor of the study group. Postoperative microhematuria was reduced in the study group (21% versus 47%, P <.01). The median need for analgesics was reduced in the study group (75.0 mg diclofenac versus 150.0 mg, P <.001), and there was a lower percentage of patients receiving analgesics 2 or more days after cesarean in the study group (26.4% versus 55.1%, P =.006). There was no difference in bowel function.Omission of the bladder flap provides short-term advantages such as reduction of operating time and incision-delivery interval, reduced blood loss, and need for analgesics. Long-term effects remain to be evaluated.

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