17 hours ago Transcribed image text: Question 3 1 pts T10-1C OPERATIVE REPORT, CYSTOSCOPY LOCATION: Outpatient, Hospital PATIENT: Martin Glass SURGEON: Ira Avila, MD PREOPERATIVE DIAGNOSIS: History of vesical neck contracture, post radical prostatectomy POSTOPERATIVE DIAGNOSIS: Same, with foreign body removal PROCEDURE PERFORMED: Cystoscopy, foreign body removal … >> Go To The Portal
Cystoscopy (sis-TOS-kuh-pee) is a procedure that allows your doctor to examine the lining of your bladder and the tube that carries urine out of your body (urethra). A hollow tube (cystoscope) equipped with a lens is inserted into your urethra and slowly advanced into your bladder.
Cystoscopy may be done in a testing room, using a local anesthetic jelly to numb your urethra. Or it may be done as an outpatient procedure, with sedation. Another option is to have cystoscopy in the hospital during general anesthesia.
Your cystoscopy procedure might follow this process: You'll be asked to empty your bladder. Then you'll lie down on a table on your back. You'll likely be positioned with your feet in stirrups and your knees bent. You may or may not need a sedative or anesthetic.
The type of cystoscopy you'll have depends on the reason for your procedure. Cystoscopy is used to diagnose, monitor and treat conditions affecting the bladder and urethra. Your doctor might recommend cystoscopy to: Investigate causes of signs and symptoms.
A numbing jelly will be applied to your urethra to help prevent pain when the cystoscope is inserted. After waiting a few minutes for the numbing, your doctor will carefully push the cystoscope into your urethra, using the smallest scope possible.
Why it's done. Cystoscopy is used to diagnose, monitor and treat conditions affecting the bladder and urethra. Your doctor might recommend cystoscopy to: Investigate causes of signs and symptoms. Those signs and symptoms can include blood in the urine, incontinence, overactive bladder and painful urination. Cystoscopy can also help determine the ...
Cystoscopy allows your doctor to view your lower urinary tract to look for abnormalities in your urethra and bladder. Surgical tools can be passed through the cystoscope to treat certain urinary tract conditions.
Your doctor might conduct a second procedure called ureteroscopy (u-ree-tur-OS-kuh-pee) at the same time as your cystoscopy.
Your doctor might conduct a second procedure called ureteroscopy (u-ree-tur-OS-kuh-pee) at the same time as your cystoscopy. Ureteroscopy uses a smaller scope to examine the tubes that carry urine from your kidneys to your bladder (ureters).
Your bladder will be filled with a sterile solution. The solution inflates the bladder and allows your doctor to get a better look inside. As your bladder fills, you may feel the need to urinate.
Or, your doctor might need to wait to discuss the results at a follow-up appointment. If your cystoscopy involved collecting a biopsy to test for bladder cancer, that sample will be sent to a lab. When the tests are complete, your doctor will let you know the results.
This 61 year-old black female was admitted to Urology with severe bladder hemorrhage. Physical examination revealed a right flank mass. On IVP the patient had poor to no function. At cystoscopy the patient had a large dilated orifice on the right side with blood gushing through.
Removal of the tumor was impossible because of its size with probable fixation to the diaphragm and great vessels.
The patient was placed in the supine position, the sandbag was placed under the right flank, the skin was prepped in the usual manner and sterile drapes were applied in the usual manner.