Liver hemangioma laparoscopic surgery six hours out of bed, without a urinary catheter is possible

When patients with hepatic hemangioma can get out of bed six hours after laparoscopic surgery, urinary catheter can be left in place. Laparoscopic surgery for hepatic hemangioma is a general anesthesia surgery, which requires circulatory monitoring and management, and inserting a urinary catheter to record urine output can assist in detecting circulatory function. In general, the urinary catheter can be removed when the patient awakens from anesthesia and can move around as well as resume voluntary urination. It is very important to maintain sufficient effective circulating blood volume during anesthesia, and circulatory function should be judged according to preoperative cardiac and renal function, fasting, dehydration, etc., as well as intraoperative blood loss and fluid loss (including urine volume), and the establishment of necessary circulatory monitoring measures can help clinical judgment, such as bleeding, blood transfusion, fluid transfusion, and urine monitoring, and urine monitoring needs to be carried out under urinary catheter insertion. If the patient retains the urinary catheter for too long after surgery, it is easy to cause complications such as urinary tract infection, therefore, when the conditions for removal of the urinary catheter are met, it should be removed in a timely manner. Six hours after laparoscopic surgery for hepatic hemangioma, you can consult a medical professional to decide whether to remove the urinary catheter.