How do doctors treat urinary retention?
With acute urinary retention, a health care professional will immediately drain the urine from your bladder using a catheter. Removing the urine from the bladder eases your pain and helps prevent your bladder and kidneys from being damaged.
What does a urologist do for urinary retention?
The most common surgery is transurethral resection of the prostate. In this procedure, the urologist uses a tiny tool, inserted through a catheter, to remove a section of the prostate. This treatment is used frequently for urinary retention caused by BPH.
How is chronic urinary retention treated?
Treatment for urinary retention depends on the type of urinary retention you have—either acute or chronic—and the cause of your urinary retention. Treatments for urinary retention may include draining the bladder, medicines, medical procedures or devices, surgery, and self-care treatments.
What happens if urinary retention is not treated?
If urinary retention is not treated, your bladder may become stretched too far or for long periods. When stretched too far or for too long, the muscles in your bladder may become damaged and no longer work correctly. Kidney damage.
What doctor treats urinary retention?
Urologists (doctors specialized in the urinary tract system) are most often involved in the care of patients with urinary retention. However, women are also often treated by urogynecologists. Internists, family physicians, and emergency-room physicians also frequently treat urinary retention.
What do you do if you can’t urinate?
The National Institutes of Health recommend the following techniques:
- Tapping the area between navel and pubic bone.
- Bending forward.
- Placing a hand in warm water.
- Running water.
- Drinking while trying to urinate.
- Trying the Valsalva maneuver.
- Exercising.
- Massaging the inner thigh.