1 / 17

Genitourinary Assessment

Genitourinary Assessment. Competencies. To Describe information to be obtained during a genitourinary assessment To identify techniques to use during a genitourinary assessment To perform a genitourinary assessment on a patient To discuss gerontological variations. Health History.

hu-tucker
Télécharger la présentation

Genitourinary Assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genitourinary Assessment

  2. Competencies • To Describe information to be obtained during a genitourinary assessment • To identify techniques to use during a genitourinary assessment • To perform a genitourinary assessment on a patient • To discuss gerontological variations

  3. Health History • Age: variations associated with age, i.e STD’s for youth, elimination problems for adults • Family history • Social history: sexual practices, substance use

  4. Subjective Data • Does the client have difficulty urinating? Is there burning? • Does the flow start and stop? • What is the frequency of urination? • Do they experience incontinence or dribbling of urine? • Do they have difficulty controlling their urine?

  5. Subjective • For female clients: did the urinary pattern change after childbirth • Do they have spontaneous urination with coughing, sneezing etc • For male clients do they have discharge from the urethral meatus?

  6. Objective • Common chief complaints: urinary frequency, pain on urination • Colour, odour and amount of urine

  7. Factors affecting elimination • Aging: kidney functioning, bladder tone & contractility, neuromuscular problems. • Food & fluids – caffeine (diuretic effect), foods high in water &/or sodium content. • Psychological variables – stress, cultural issues, embarrassment

  8. Activity and muscle tone • Pathological conditions – urinary tract abnormalities, UTI, diabetes, kidney stones • Medications – diuretics, anticoagulants

  9. Normal Elimination • Urine should be straw coloured (pale yellow), with no offensive odour or sediment • Our total blood volume passes through the kidneys about every half hour filtering waste • Bladder is smooth muscle sac with 3 layers

  10. Stretch receptors in the bladder signal the need to void • Usually about 200-300 mLs of urine in bladder will activate this process but can distend to hold 3000-4000 mLs of urine • Typically urinate about every 3-4 hours

  11. Terms associated with Elimination • Anuria: no urine • Dysuria: difficulty in voiding • Frequency: increased incidence of voiding • Glycosuria: glucose in urine • Nocturia: frequency during the night • Urgency: strong desire to void

  12. Kidneys • Located high and deep under the diaphragm • Best to assess for kidney at the costovertebral angle • Primary function of the kidneys is filtration and elimination of metabolic wastes

  13. Inspection • Have client empty their bladder and lie on the bed • Would normally inspect the reproductive organs at this time • Looking for any noticeable deviations from normal • Most often covered as part of reproductive exam

  14. Inspection • Assessing for any visible signs of infection from the urinary meatus • With men must assess whether or not the person has been circumcised

  15. Palpation • To palpate for urethral discharge gently squeeze the glans between the index finger and the thumb • The urinary meatus is normally free from discharge • Any discharge should be cultured

  16. Prostate Gland • An important part of the exam for men • The prostate is palpated on the anterior surface of the rectum • An enlarged prostate my indicate benign prostatic hypertrophy, a condition that affects men as they age and may cause urinary difficulties

  17. Lifespan Variations • Bladder capacity decreases to 250 mL owing to periurethral atrophy • May have 1-2 periods of nocturia • Increasing chance of men developing prostate disease that may impact on urinary functioning

More Related