Care for an indwelling urinary catheterA urinary
catheter is a flexible plastic tube used to drain
urine from your bladder when you cannot urinate by yourself. A doctor will
place the catheter into the bladder by inserting it through the urethra, the
opening that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body. When
the catheter is in the bladder, a small balloon is inflated to keep the
catheter in place. The catheter allows urine to drain from the bladder into a
bag that is usually attached to the thigh. A catheter may be needed because of certain medical conditions, such
as an enlarged prostate, the inability to control the release of urine, or
after surgery on the pelvis or urinary tract. Urinary catheters are also used
when the lower part of the body is paralyzed. Catheter careAlways wash your hands before and after dealing with your catheter.
Follow all of the instructions your doctor has given you. Also: - Make sure that urine is flowing out of the
catheter into the drainage bag.
- Make sure the tube doesn't get
twisted or kinked.
- Check the area around the urethra for
inflammation or signs of infection, such as irritated, swollen, red, or tender
skin at the insertion site or drainage around the catheter.
- Keep
the drainage bag below the level of the bladder.
- Make sure that the
drainage bag does not drag and pull on the catheter.
- Unless you've
been told otherwise, it's okay to shower with your catheter and drainage bag in
place.
- Clean the area around the drainage tube twice a day, using
soap and water. Dry with a clean towel afterward.
- Do not tug or
pull on the catheter.
- Do not apply powder or lotion to the catheter
insertion site.
- Do not have sexual intercourse while wearing an
indwelling catheter.
- You may wrap a small piece of gauze around the
area where the catheter comes out of your body. Change the gauze if it feels
wet. Use a new piece of gauze each time you clean your catheter.
- At
night you may wish to hang the bag on the side of your bed.
- Do not
allow the bag to pull on the catheter.
Living with a catheterTry to prevent constipation, and be sure you drink enough fluids.
Most adults should drink between 8 and 10 glasses of water, or noncaffeinated
beverages each day. Include fruits, vegetables, and fiber in your diet each
day. Try a stool softener, such as Colace, if your stools are very hard. Draining the urine collection bagYou will need to empty the bag regularly, whenever it is half-full,
and at bedtime. If your health professional has instructed you to measure the
amount of urine, do so before you have emptied the urine into the
toilet. - Wash your hands with soap and water. If you are
emptying another person's collection bag you may wish to wear disposable
gloves.
- Unfasten the tube from the drainage bag.
- Fasten
the tubing clamp and remove the drainage cap.
- Drain the urine into
the toilet. Avoid touching the tubing or drainage cap on the toilet, the
collection container, or the floor.
- Replace the drainage cap, close
the clamp.
- Refasten the collection tube to the drainage
bag.
- Wash your hands with soap and water.
When to call a health professionalIf your health professional has given you instructions about when
to notify him or her, be sure to follow those instructions. Call your health
professional if: - No urine or very little urine is flowing into
the collection bag for 4 or more hours.
- No urine or very little
urine is flowing into the collection bag and you feel like your bladder is
full.
- You have new pain in your abdomen, pelvis, legs, or
back.
- Your urine has changed color, is very cloudy, looks bloody,
or has large blood clots in it.
- The insertion site becomes very
irritated, swollen, red, or tender, or you have pus draining from the catheter
insertion site.
- Your urine has a foul odor.
- Urine is
leaking from the insertion site.
- You have a fever of
100°F (37.8°C) or higher or
back or flank pain.
- You develop nausea,
vomiting, or shaking chills.
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