Posts Tagged ‘bladder’

Malpractice Medical Cystoscopy Male Surgery 2

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

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medical malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Now it’s time to talk about the actual procedure your doctor has recommended for you.
On the day of your operation, you will be asked to put on a surgical gown.
You may receive a sedative by mouth
and an intravenous line may be put in. Medical Malpractice
You will then be transferred to the operating table.
Once on the table, your feet and legs will be placed in an elevated position with your knees apart.
You’ll be asked to urinate so the amount of urine remaining in the bladder can be measured.
The nurse will swab the penis with an antiseptic solution.

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Malpractice Medical Cystoscopy Male Surgery 3

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

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Medical Malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor will then lift your penis upward.
A well-lubricated cystoscope is gently inserted into the urethra,
the opening at the head of the penis, and slowly guided inward.
When the cystoscope reaches the back of the penis, your doctor will pull the penis downward in order to create a straight path into the bladder.
Once the cystoscope is inside the bladder, your doctor will inject a small amount of water through the cystoscope and into the bladder. Medical Malpractice
The water serves to expand the bladder, helping your doctor to better examine the interior. It also helps by washing away any blood or remaining urine.
You may feel a sense of fullness as though you need to urinate. You’ll be encouraged to relax and not to try to retain the water in your bladder.
As the team completes it’s inspection, they’ll be looking for suspicious tissues. If they find bladder stones, your doctor may try to crush these so that they can pass out of the bladder during normal urination. medical malpractice
If the team finds a suspicious growth they will use a special grasping tool to take a sample of tissue in order to send to a laboratory for analysis.
When the inspection is complete, your doctor will remove the cystoscope and you’ll be asked to empty your bladder.
Your doctor will probably ask you to wear a temporary Foley catheter. Malpractice Medical
A Foley catheter is a narrow tube inserted through your urethra and into your bladder. The catheter is connected to a bag that is attached to your leg by a strap. While the Foley catheter is in place, urine will pass from your bladder into the bag. You will not need to urinate into a toilet.
The nurse will show you how to change the bag when it is full. An appointment will be made for you to return to the doctor’s office in a couple of days to have the catheter removed.
As soon as the anesthesia wears off and you feel comfortable, you’ll be allowed to leave.

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Malpractice Medical Gallbladder Removal Hassan Surgery 3

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
Medical Malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Then, after you’re asleep, your doctor will make a small, vertical incision in your navel.
Using a pair of small retractors, the surgeon will gently open the incision and divide the exposed tissues.
Sutures resembling a purse string are placed in the skin around the navel.
Next, a special instrument called a Hassan Trocar is inserted through the opening in the navel.
The purse string sutures are pulled, causing the skin to tighten around the instrument. This creates an airtight seal. medical malpractice
The team then connects the Trocar to a small hose …
… in order to inflate the abdomen with carbon dioxide. This serves to enlarge the internal work area and to separate the organs.
They will make three or more incisions into the abdomen, with care taken to keep the openings as small as possible.
Next, the laparoscope is carefully inserted into the Hassan Trocar. Once the laparoscope is in place, it will provide video images to allow the placement of additional instruments.
The surgeon will then locate and retract the liver to identify the gallbladder.
Next, the surgeon removes the connecting tissue in order to expose the cystic duct and the cystic artery… Medical Malpractice
Using clips, the surgical teams clamps off both the duct and artery
which are later cut to prepare the gallbladder for removal. …
Finally, any remaining tissue connecting the gallbladder to the liver is cut…
The gallbladders is moved into the laparoscopic working port
where it is taken out of the body.
Then the instruments are withdrawn…
the carbon dioxide is allowed to escape…
the muscle layers and other tissues are sewn together…
and the skin is closed with sutures or staples.
Finally, a sterile dressing is applied.

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Malpractice Medical Cystoscopy Female Surgery 1

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
medical malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a Cystoscopy. But what exactly does that mean?
The lower urinary tract allows your body to store and release urine.
It’s made up of two parts, the bladder and the urethra.
Your bladder is a hollow organ that expands as it fills with urine. Because it is made of muscular tissue, it can also contract and force urine to pass out of the body, through the urethra. Your urethra carries urine from the bladder to the outside of your body.
Your doctor feels that it is necessary to examine the interior of the urethra and bladder, to try to determine the cause of a problem that you may be having.
Medical Malpractice
Symptoms that may call for a routine Cystoscopy include:

* Persistent infection of the urinary tract
* Bladder stones
* Bleeding while urinating
* Irritation due to polyps, or
* Changes to the bladder caused by cancer.
Medical Malpractice
Cystoscopy is a simple procedure during which your doctor will insert a well-lubricated, instrument called a cystoscope through your urethra and into your bladder.
The cystoscope allows your doctor to visually inspect the interior of your bladder. It also allows your doctor to remove small pieces of tissue for later examination and even to crush small bladder stones, should any be present.
Any tissue that your doctor removes from your bladder will be sent immediately to a laboratory for analysis. Your doctor will ask the laboratory to check for any sign of cancer or other abnormality.

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Malpractice Medical Gallbladder Removal Hassan Surgery 1

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
Medical Malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor has recommended the removal of your gallbladder. But what does that actually mean?

The gallbladder is a small organ located below the liver. It’s function is to store bile used by the intestines to digest food.
Medical Malpractice
Gallstones – small calcified deposits – sometimes form and block the bile ducts which lead from the gallbladder to the intestines.

In many cases, the problem becomes so severe, that the only effective treatment is to remove the entire gallbladder.
Medical Malpractice
This is the most common reason for gallbladder surgery.

Other reasons for removing the gallbladder include chronic or severe or the growth of a tumor.

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Malpractice Medical TURP Transurethral Resection Prostate Surgery 3

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
medical malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor will then…
…lift your penis upward.
A well-lubricated instrument called a resectoscope is then gently inserted into the urethra.
When the resectoscope reaches the back of the penis, your doctor will pull the penis downward in order to create a straight path into the prostate.
Using this tool, your doctor will then scrape excess tissue from the prostate, restoring it to its normal size. Medical Malpractice
Tissue removed from the prostate may be sent a laboratory for analysis.
When the surgery is complete, your doctor will remove the resectoscope. Your doctor will probably ask you to wear a temporary Foley catheter.
A Foley catheter is a narrow tube inserted through your urethra and into your bladder. The catheter is connected to a bag that is attached to your leg by a strap. While the Foley catheter is in place, urine will pass from your bladder into the bag. You will not need to urinate into a toilet. Medical Malpractice
The nurse will show you how to change the bag when it is full. An appointment will be made for you to return to the doctor’s office in a couple of days to have the catheter removed. As soon as the anesthesia wears off and you feel comfortable, you’ll be allowed to leave.

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Malpractice Medical TURP Transurethral Resection Prostate Surgery 1

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
medical malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a Trans Urethral Resection of the Prostate – or TURP. But what exactly does that mean?

The prostate gland is a walnut-sized organ that is part of your reproductive system.

It provides some of the fluid contained in semen.
Medical Malpractice
The prostate is located just under the bladder and behind the testicles.
The urethra — a hollow tube that carries both urine and semen to the penis — passes through the prostate.

In some men, the prostate gland becomes enlarged. Symptoms of an enlarged prostate include:

* a full bladder feeling even when the bladder is empty

* pain when urinating

* weak urinary stream

* infertility

* and sexual dysfunction.
Medical Malpractice
To relieve you of your symptoms, your doctor feels that you would benefit from a surgical procedure called TURP.

TURP is designed to relieve symptoms by reducing the size of the prostate.
It is also a diagnostic procedure. Tissue removed during a resection of the prostate or TURP is routinely screened for the presence of cancer.

So make sure that you ask your doctor to carefully explain the reasons behind this recommendation.

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Malpractice Medical Cystoscopy Male Surgery 1

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

http://www.PreOp.com
Medical Malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO
Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a Cystoscopy. But what does that actually mean?

The lower urinary tract allows your body to store and release urine.
It’s made up of two parts, the bladder and the urethra. Medical Malpractice

Your bladder is a hollow organ that expands as it fills with urine. Because it is made of muscular tissue, it can also contract and force urine to pass out of the body, through the urethra. Your urethra carries urine from the bladder all the way through the opening in the penis.
Medical Malpractice
Your doctor feels that it is necessary to examine the interior of the urethra and bladder, to try to determine the cause of a problem that you may be having.

Symptoms that may call for a routine Cystoscopy include:

* Persistent infection of the urinary tract
* Bladder stones
* Bleeding while urinating
* Irritation due to polyps, or
* Changes to the bladder caused by cancer.
Medical Malpractice
Cystoscopy is a simple procedure during which your doctor will insert a well-lubricated, instrument called a cystoscope through your urethra and into your bladder.

The cystoscope allows your doctor to visually inspect the interior of your bladder. It also allows your doctor to remove small pieces of tissue for later examination and even to crush small bladder stones, should any be present.
Medical Malpractice
Any tissue that your doctor removes from your bladder will be sent immediately to a laboratory for analysis. Your doctor will ask the laboratory to check for any sign of cancer or other abnormality.

So make sure that you ask your doctor to carefully explain the reasons behind this recommendation.

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