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Indwelling bladder catheters frequently are placed in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty with spinal anesthesia, presumably to lower risk for postoperative urinary retention. To determine whether this practice makes sense, researchers at a Philadelphia hospital randomized 200 such patients (mean age, 59; 50% women) to receive either an indwelling urinary catheter (placed during surgery and removed within 48 hours) or no catheter. Standard protocols for both groups outlined criteria for postoperative urinary retention and need for in-and-out catheterization.
Of 107 no-catheter patients, 9 developed urinary retention postoperatively, 8 of whom were managed successfully with a single in-and-out-catheterization. Of 93 indwelling-catheter…