Cargando…

A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan

Patient: Female, 66-year-old Final Diagnosis: Ovarian cyst Symptoms: Urinary retention Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Automatic bladder scan Specialty: Genetics • Geriatrics • General and Internal Medicine • Obstetrics and Gynecology • Radiology • Urology OBJECTIVE: Mistake in diagnosis BACKGROUN...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chigrinskiy, Pavel, Heyman, Samuel N., Simons, Moshe, Pfeffer, Michal, Marcus, Esther-Lee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9623540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36299173
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937318
_version_ 1784822019993370624
author Chigrinskiy, Pavel
Heyman, Samuel N.
Simons, Moshe
Pfeffer, Michal
Marcus, Esther-Lee
author_facet Chigrinskiy, Pavel
Heyman, Samuel N.
Simons, Moshe
Pfeffer, Michal
Marcus, Esther-Lee
author_sort Chigrinskiy, Pavel
collection PubMed
description Patient: Female, 66-year-old Final Diagnosis: Ovarian cyst Symptoms: Urinary retention Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Automatic bladder scan Specialty: Genetics • Geriatrics • General and Internal Medicine • Obstetrics and Gynecology • Radiology • Urology OBJECTIVE: Mistake in diagnosis BACKGROUND: Automated bladder scanning has become a principal tool in the assessment and management of chronically debilitated patients residing in skilled nursing facilities, hospices, and acute inpatient settings. To a large extent, the bladder scan, generally performed by nursing staff, has replaced physical examination while addressing the differential diagnoses of anuria or voiding disturbances that require consideration of urinary catheterization. Health care providers can quickly master this easily performed technique, and currently, due to confidence in the bladder scan finding, physical examination with suprapubic palpation and percussion may be carelessly omitted. The case description presented here illustrates how not performing a physical examination can lead to misdiagnosis caused by misinterpretation of bladder scan findings. CASE REPORT: A 66-year-old, quadriparetic, chronically ventilated female patient with achondroplasia underwent repeated hospital referrals and bladder catheterizations for presumed flaccid, neurogenic bladder with urinary retention. This postulated diagnosis was based on occasional reports of urinary catheter obstruction as well as on automated bladder scanning indicating a markedly distended bladder. However, the bladder could not be drained by insertion of urinary catheters. Eventually, a proper physical examination excluded the presence of suprapubic fullness compatible with distended bladder and contradicting bladder scan findings, prompting re-examining an overlooked evaluation of computed tomography that reported a huge ovarian cyst. The patient was found to have intact voiding capabilities and is now weaned from the catheter. CONCLUSIONS: This case and the literature review underscore drawbacks in automated bladder scanning. This technique should be used as an adjunctive measure rather than a replacement for a physical examination in the evaluation of voiding disturbances, especially when there are discrepancies between bladder scan findings and the volume of urine drained by catheterization.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9623540
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher International Scientific Literature, Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-96235402022-11-07 A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan Chigrinskiy, Pavel Heyman, Samuel N. Simons, Moshe Pfeffer, Michal Marcus, Esther-Lee Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Female, 66-year-old Final Diagnosis: Ovarian cyst Symptoms: Urinary retention Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Automatic bladder scan Specialty: Genetics • Geriatrics • General and Internal Medicine • Obstetrics and Gynecology • Radiology • Urology OBJECTIVE: Mistake in diagnosis BACKGROUND: Automated bladder scanning has become a principal tool in the assessment and management of chronically debilitated patients residing in skilled nursing facilities, hospices, and acute inpatient settings. To a large extent, the bladder scan, generally performed by nursing staff, has replaced physical examination while addressing the differential diagnoses of anuria or voiding disturbances that require consideration of urinary catheterization. Health care providers can quickly master this easily performed technique, and currently, due to confidence in the bladder scan finding, physical examination with suprapubic palpation and percussion may be carelessly omitted. The case description presented here illustrates how not performing a physical examination can lead to misdiagnosis caused by misinterpretation of bladder scan findings. CASE REPORT: A 66-year-old, quadriparetic, chronically ventilated female patient with achondroplasia underwent repeated hospital referrals and bladder catheterizations for presumed flaccid, neurogenic bladder with urinary retention. This postulated diagnosis was based on occasional reports of urinary catheter obstruction as well as on automated bladder scanning indicating a markedly distended bladder. However, the bladder could not be drained by insertion of urinary catheters. Eventually, a proper physical examination excluded the presence of suprapubic fullness compatible with distended bladder and contradicting bladder scan findings, prompting re-examining an overlooked evaluation of computed tomography that reported a huge ovarian cyst. The patient was found to have intact voiding capabilities and is now weaned from the catheter. CONCLUSIONS: This case and the literature review underscore drawbacks in automated bladder scanning. This technique should be used as an adjunctive measure rather than a replacement for a physical examination in the evaluation of voiding disturbances, especially when there are discrepancies between bladder scan findings and the volume of urine drained by catheterization. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2022-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9623540/ /pubmed/36299173 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937318 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Chigrinskiy, Pavel
Heyman, Samuel N.
Simons, Moshe
Pfeffer, Michal
Marcus, Esther-Lee
A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title_full A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title_fullStr A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title_full_unstemmed A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title_short A 66-Year-Old Woman with Achondroplasia and Quadriparesis with an Ovarian Cyst Erroneously Diagnosed as Urinary Retention by an Automated Bladder Scan
title_sort 66-year-old woman with achondroplasia and quadriparesis with an ovarian cyst erroneously diagnosed as urinary retention by an automated bladder scan
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9623540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36299173
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937318
work_keys_str_mv AT chigrinskiypavel a66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT heymansamueln a66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT simonsmoshe a66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT pfeffermichal a66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT marcusestherlee a66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT chigrinskiypavel 66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT heymansamueln 66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT simonsmoshe 66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT pfeffermichal 66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan
AT marcusestherlee 66yearoldwomanwithachondroplasiaandquadriparesiswithanovariancysterroneouslydiagnosedasurinaryretentionbyanautomatedbladderscan