Objective: To estimate the prevalence of incomplete bladder emptying by the elderly and to determine its significance and its relationship to overflow incontinence.
Design: Survey comparing groups with and without incomplete bladder emptying.
Setting: A geriatric hospital ward.
Patients: One hundred patients who were consecutively admitted, with an average age of 82.6 years.
Measurements: A physical examination, perineal examination, micturition assessment, and evaluation of the post-voiding residual urine volume (PRUV) by ultrasonography at day 1 and day 8 following admission. One-channel cystometry and urine cultures were also done. Between-group comparison was performed between groups R (ie, PRUV greater than 50 mL) and C (ie, PRUV less than 50 mL).
Main results: The prevalence of PRUV greater than 50 mL was 34%. Group R patients presented with greater dependency; death was the final outcome of hospitalization in 36% of these cases (vs only 9% in group C). A high PRUV was not correlated with urinary tract infection or renal failure, but there was a strong, almost significant trend toward incontinence being more prevalent in R (57%) than in C (38%) (P = 0.06). Group R presented a hypotonic bladder in 45% of cases, evidenced by cystometry, versus 6% in group C.
Conclusions: In cases with a high PRUV, the utmost caution is necessary both in the diagnosis of overflow incontinence and in establishing a therapeutic approach. Incomplete bladder emptying is associated with a poor prognosis.