INTRODUCTION: In closed intraperitoneal bladder trauma, an alternative to laparotomy is laparoscopy. The rupture is closed with endoscopic sutures, and the bladder is drained with a urethral catheter. In the literature, the issue of the placement of a trocar cystostomy during laparoscopic treatment of patients with intraperitoneal bladder ruptures requiring prolonged drainage is insufficiently covered.
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: Determination of the optimal trocar cystostomy method during laparoscopic treatment of intraperitoneal bladder rupture.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Trocar cystostomy was performed in 8 patients with intraperitoneal bladder ruptures, among whom 7 had concomitant diseases of the prostate gland, and 1 had urethral stricture. Trocar cystostomy during laparoscopic surgery was performed in three different ways. Results. In the first method, the rupture of the bladder was initially sutured. Then, through the urethral catheter, the bladder was filled with saline. A trocar cystostomy was inserted through the suprapubic region. The second method consisted in the installation of a trocar cystostomy under the control of a laparoscope even before the suturing of the bladder rupture. In the third method proposed by us (patent No. 2592023), a Foley-type catheter with a balloon capacity of at least 200 ml was inserted into the abdominal cavity through the laparoscopic port. A catheter was inserted from the abdomen through an intraperitoneal rupture into the bladder. Inside the bladder, the catheter balloon was filled with saline. Then, through the suprapubic region, the anterior abdominal wall, the bladder and the inflated balloon of the catheter were pierced layer by layer with a trocar. Another catheter was inserted through the trocar into the bladder. After removal of the catheter with a ruptured balloon, the intraperitoneal rupture of the bladder was sutured.
FINDINGS: According to the results of the study, the third method of inserting a trocar cystostomy turned out to be the most optimal and safe.