Study design: Retrospective analysis of medical records on spinal cord inju
ry (SCI) patients with neuropathic bladder.
Objective: To determine SCI patients' compliance with the method of bladder
management they used on discharge from inpatient rehabilitation.
Setting: Ankara University Medical School, Department of Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation, Spinal Cord Injury Unit, which treats patients referred
from throughout Turkey.
Methods: The bladder management method of 50 new SCI patients was noted at
admission, discharge and follow-up. Reasons for changing the initial method
were documented. For analysis, patients were grouped by gender, level and
completeness of injury. Compliance with bladder management method was compa
red between these groups by chi-square test.
Results: The method of bladder management at admission was indwelling cathe
ter (IC) for 86% of the patients. Most were switched to clean intermittent
catheterisation (CIC) by rehabilitation discharge. Of 38 patients (76%) on
CIC at discharge, 20 (52%) discontinued this method and reverted to IC duri
ng follow-up. Compliance with CIC was lower for women, for tetraplegics, an
d for those with complete injury. Dependence on care givers, severe spastic
ity interfering with catheterisation, incontinence despite anticholinergic
agents, and lack of availability of external collective devices for female
patients were the main reasons for low compliance with CIC.
Conclusion: The bladder management method of SCI patients should be selecte
d so as to be suitable to the patients' life st;le. Besides reducing morbid
ity, it also has to enhance the quality of life.