Complications and their management
Sepsis, bleeding, retention and vasovagal: recognising them and knowing when to worry.
Most biopsies are uneventful, but you must know the complications cold, because the serious one moves fast. This is the module that keeps your patients safe.
The raw multi-parametric scan.
Segmented gland, zones and lesion as a rotatable model.
Future spatial-computing workflows for placing the anatomy model in clinical space.
01 Sepsis: the one to fear 4 min
Fever and rigors after a biopsy are an emergency until proven otherwise, and far more likely after TRUS. Act fast: the sepsis pathway, blood cultures, and prompt broad-spectrum antibiotics.
A man has fever and rigors the evening after a TRUS biopsy. You should?
02 Bleeding 4 min
Bleeding is common and usually benign, but set expectations.
- Haematuria: very common, usually settles over days.
- Haematospermia: blood in the semen for several weeks. Harmless, but alarming if not warned about.
- Rectal bleeding (after TRUS): usually self-limiting, rarely needs intervention.
Blood in the semen for a few weeks after biopsy is?
03 Retention and vasovagal 3 min
Some men cannot pass urine afterwards, more likely with a large gland or after transperineal work. That is acute retention and needs a catheter. A vasovagal faint during the procedure is managed with positioning and reassurance.
A man cannot pass urine after his biopsy. The likely problem?
04 Safety-netting 3 min
Every patient leaves knowing the three things that mean seek urgent help: fever or rigors, inability to pass urine, and heavy bleeding. Give it in writing as well as verbally.
The single most important safety-net symptom to stress is?
That is Module 9. You can recognise and respond to the complications that matter.
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