posted on 2018-03-28, 15:04authored byMamoun Abdelrahman, Niall Francis Davis, Barry P. McMahon, Michael T. Walsh, Thomas E.D. McDermott, John A. Thornhill, Rustom P. Manecksha
Introduction We aimed to investigate irrigation and drainage characteristics of commercially available
urethral catheters and determined which catheter offers the best flow characteristics.
Material and methods Twelve different commercially available urethral catheters from three companies
(Bard™, Rusch™ and Dover™) were investigated to compare their irrigation and drainage properties.
Irrigation port, drainage port and overall cross-sectional areas for a 24Fr 3-way catheter was
measured and compared. The maximum (Qmax) and average (Qavg) irrigation and drainage flow rates
for each catheter was measured for 20–40 seconds using uroflowmetry. The primary endpoint was to
determine which catheter offers optimal irrigation and drainage parameters.
Results Overall cross-sectional area, irrigation port cross-sectional area, and drainage port cross- sectional
area differed significantly for each 24Fr 3-way catheter assessed (p <0.001). The 24Fr 3-way Rusch Simplastic
™ catheter consistently demonstrated the greatest maximal flow rate (Qmax: 5 ±0.3 ml/s) and average
flow rate (Qavg: 4.6 ±0.2 ml/s) for irrigation. The 24Fr 3-way Dover™ catheter provided the greatest drainage
properties (Qmax: 19.7 ±2 ml/s; Q avg: 15.9 ±5 ml/s). In the setting of continuous bladder irrigation,
the 24Fr 3-way Rusch Simplastic™ catheter provided the highest irrigation rates (Qmax: 6.6 ±1.8 ml/s;
Q avg: 4.6 ±0.9 ml/s).
Conclusions Three-way catheters demonstrate significant differences in their irrigation and drainage
characteristics. The type of catheter selected should be based on the appropriate prioritization of efficient
bladder irrigation versus efficient bladder drainage.
History
Publication
Central European Journal of Urology;70, pp. 382-387