Bladder exstrophy repair
| Anesthesia type |
General |
|---|---|
| Airway |
ETT |
| Lines and access |
PIV x2 Arterial line (often recommended) |
| Monitors |
Standard ASA Temperature Arterial BP (if placed) |
| Primary anesthetic considerations | |
| Preoperative |
-Neonate/infant physiology -Associated congenital anomalies |
| Intraoperative |
-Large fluid shifts and blood loss risk -Hypothermia prevention -Pelvic osteotomies need -Regional analgesia (caudal/epidural) |
| Postoperative |
-Ventilatory support (neonate or prolonged case) -Epidural analgesia management -Wound dehiscence risk -Electrolyte abnormalities |
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| Editor rating | |
| User likes | 0 |
Bladder exstrophy is a rare congenital anomaly characterized by failure of lower abdominal wall and anterior bladder closure, resulting in exposure of posterior bladder wall through the abdominal wall. The defect results from failure of mesenchymal migration and premature rupture of cloacal membrane during embryologic development.
Surgical repair is typically performed in neonatal period (primary closure) or later in staged reconstruction.
Overview
Indications
Surgical repair indicated in all cases of classic bladder exstrophy with goals to
- Protect exposed bladder mucosa from infection and trauma
- Prevent progressive renal damage
- Restore urinary continence
- Reconstruct genital and abdominal anatomy
Timing
- Ideally within first year of life, preferably before 9 months
- Immediate closure within first 72 hours of life when pelvic bones are more malleable can help avoid osteotomies
- Delayed or staged reconstruction can be performed in older infants or failed primary closure
Surgical procedure
- Bladder plate mobilization and closure (exposed bladder plate is dissected and mobilized to allow posterior wall approximation)
- Bladder neck and urethra reconstruction (if part of staged repair)
- Abdominal wall closure (rectus muscles and fascia are mobilized and reapproximated)
- Pelvic osteotomies (commonly done to reduce tension and allow pubic approximation, which increase surgical time, blood loss, and postop pain)
- Urinary drainage (suprapubic catheter, urethral stents, urethral catheter depending on stage)
- Postoperative immobilization (e.g. Bryant's traction or Spica cast to protect repair)
Preoperative management
Patient evaluation
| System | Considerations |
|---|---|
| Airway | -Neonatal airway considerations
-Syndromic features possible -Prematurity possible -Appropriate ETT size |
| Neurologic | -Developmental abnormalities possible |
| Cardiovascular | -Congenital heart disease screening
-Neonatal physiology (HR dependence) |
| Pulmonary | -Prematurity related lung disease
-Postoperative apnea risk |
| Gastrointestinal | -NPO considerations in neonate
-Aspiration risk |
| Hematologic | -T&C
-Anticipate moderate to significant blood loss |
| Renal | -Urinary tract anomalies
-Monitor electrolytes |
| Endocrine | -Neonatal glucose (hypoglycemia risk) |
| Other | -Hypothermia risk
-Latex allergy precautions |
Labs and studies
- T&C
- CBC
- BMP, electrolytes
- Echocardiogram if cardiac anomaly suspected
Operating room setup
- Blood products available
- Fluid warmer
- Forced-air warming device
- Pediatric airway equipment
- Consider arterial line setup
- Caudal/epidural kit
Patient preparation and premedication
- Multidisciplinary planning per institution (urology + orthopedic if osteotomies)
Regional and neuraxial techniques
Caudal or Lumbar Epidural strongly considered for
- Intra/postoperative opioid-sparing pain control
- Reduction in movement to protect repair
- Sometimes tunneled as epidural will be in place for days to weeks
Intraoperative management
Monitoring and access
- Standard ASA
- Core temperature montoring
- PIV x2 preferred
- Arterial line commonly used
- Foley/suprapubic catheter placed by surgeon with UOP monitoring
Induction and airway management
- Standard inhalational or IV induction
- Neonatal dosing considerations
- Avoid hypotension
- Standard pediatric airway considerations
Maintenance and surgical considerations
- Balanced anesthesia with volatile or TIVA
- Temperature management (large exposed viscera, long case)
- Blood loss replaced promptly (neonates tolerate anemia poorly)
- Fluid balance (neonates sensitive to hypo and hypervolemia)
- Glucose monitoring (neonates have limited glycogen stores)
- Osteotomies may increase bleeding and stimulation
- Continuous epidural infusions commonly used
Emergence
Extubation if
- Hemodynamically stable
- Normothermic
- Adequate ventilation
Consider postoperative ventilation if
- Premature infants
- Prolonged case
- Significant blood loss
- Severe edema
Postoperative management
Disposition
Pain management
Potential complications
Procedure variants
| Variant 1 | Variant 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Unique considerations | ||
| Indications | ||
| Position | ||
| Surgical time | ||
| EBL | ||
| Postoperative disposition | ||
| Pain management | ||
| Potential complications |
References
Top contributors: Zining Chen