Wireless Smart Catheter for Bladder Control: Interview with Matt Monarski, CEO of UroDev Medical
UroDev Medical (formerly Spinal Singularity), a medtech company based in Minneapolis, has developed the IntelliFlow Bladder Management System, a wireless urinary catheter that can be controlled with the touch of a button on a remote control. At present, patients with urinary retention may have to use up to 200 disposable urinary catheters a month. This is not only inconvenient, but can cause complications, including infection. It can also be expensive. To address these issues, UroDev Medical has created the Intelliflow. The catheter can reside in place for a week, meaning much fewer catheter changes. A magnetic valv...
Source: Medgadget - February 23, 2021 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Exclusive Urology Source Type: blogs

Implantable Bladder Wrap for Improved Urinary Control
Researchers at Penn State have developed an implantable device that coils around the bladder to detect when the bladder is full and assist with emptying it by contracting on-demand. The device is intended to treat underactive bladder, a condition in which incomplete bladder emptying leads to irregular and uncomfortable urination. “Researchers have been interested in studying urinary control for a while because a lot of diseases and conditions are related to this,” said Larry Cheng, a researcher involved in the study. “There are two conditions in particular that researchers have been studying. The first...
Source: Medgadget - November 16, 2020 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Rehab Surgery Urology Source Type: blogs

Soft Actuator and Sensor for Underactive Bladder Treatment
Researchers at the National University of Singapore have developed a soft sensor and actuator to monitor bladder volume and help empty it on-demand. The device is intended to be implanted on the bladder surface during a surgical procedure to treat patients who cannot completely empty their bladders voluntarily. Patients can suffer from an underactive bladder following a spinal cord injury, meaning that they cannot easily sense when the bladder is full, or completely empty it. Approximately 80% of patients who suffer a spinal cord injury will demonstrate some bladder dysfunction. Not only is this inconvenient and upsetti...
Source: Medgadget - May 6, 2020 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Conn Hastings Tags: Neurology Rehab Surgery Source Type: blogs

Medgadget ’s Best Medical Technologies of 2019
Wrapping up this year and looking back on the particularly interesting developments in medical technology, we at Medgadget are impressed and very excited about the future. We’re lucky to cover one of the most innovative fields of research and one that improves and saves lives. Having a constant eye on what’s new in medtech, we present what we believe are the most novel, smart, and medically important technologies we encountered in this passing year. As in years past, a few trends have emerged. Opiod Overdose Treatment Opioid addiction, and accompanying overdoses, have become disturbingly common lately. A ...
Source: Medgadget - December 30, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Exclusive Source Type: blogs

EchoNous Releases AI Powered Ultrasound Bladder Scanner
Scanning the bladder and measuring its volume is a common procedure usually performed by nurses. It may be done for a variety of reasons, but achieving accuracy is key. Catheterization-based methods may be the most accurate, but non-invasive ultrasound is a lot more attractive. With conventional ultrasound one must be very careful to properly gauge the margins of the bladder, then essentially use a ruler on a 3D object, and finish using a formula that really only provides a rough estimate. EchoNous, based in Redmond, Washington, has released a device that lets nurses measure bladder volume faster and with greater confiden...
Source: Medgadget - February 20, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Editors Tags: Critical Care Medicine Pediatrics Urology Source Type: blogs

Eponymythology: Atraumatic Abdominal Ecchymosis
LITFL • Life in the Fast Lane Medical Blog LITFL • Life in the Fast Lane Medical Blog - Emergency medicine and critical care medical education blog Overview We review the original descriptions of 5 eponymous signs (n=6) associated with non-traumatic abdominal ecchymosis. These commonly cited eponyms involving the abdominal wall and flanks (Grey Turner, Cullen and Stabler); scrotum (Bryant) and upper thigh (Fox) may be useful clues directing the examiner to consider potentially serious causes of abdominal pathology. Cullen sign Thomas Stephen Cullen (1869–1953) was a Canadian gynecologist Non-traumatic peri-um...
Source: Life in the Fast Lane - April 18, 2018 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Mike Cadogan Tags: Eponymythology Abdominal Ecchymosis Bryant sign Cullen sign fox sign Francis Edward Stabler George Grey Turner Grey Turner sign John Adrian Fox John Henry Bryant Stabler sign Thomas Stephen Cullen Source Type: blogs

A Procedure’s Impact on Patient Comfort, Care, and Outcome
This blog teaches procedures, with its case studies and videos intended to help you perfect your technique and strengthen your confidence. This month we explore issues related to procedural patient impact. How will your intervention positively or negatively affect patient outcome? What happens when we decide to step in and complete a procedure?   A risk is always inherent when a provider undertakes a procedure, no matter how insignificant. Carefully, we weigh the pros and cons of the potential procedure with our patients. Will our intervention cause a positive effect or outcome? Our goals are to repair, resolve, or restor...
Source: The Procedural Pause - August 3, 2015 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Blog Posts Source Type: blogs

A Procedure’s Impact on Patient Comfort, Care, and Outcome
This blog teaches procedures, with its case studies and videos intended to help you perfect your technique and strengthen your confidence. This month we explore issues related to procedural patient impact. How will your intervention positively or negatively affect patient outcome? What happens when we decide to step in and complete a procedure?   A risk is always inherent when a provider undertakes a procedure, no matter how insignificant. Carefully, we weigh the pros and cons of the potential procedure with our patients. Will our intervention cause a positive effect or outcome? Our goals are to repair, resolve, or rest...
Source: The Procedural Pause - August 3, 2015 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Blog Posts Source Type: blogs

The Overhyping of the July Effect and What to Do About It
By HEMANT SINDHU, MD Filing into the auditorium, scanning the room hoping to spot a familiar face, there is a generalized sense of anxiety. Today is orientation, a day that marks the beginning of a new chapter in the lives of these bright-eyed young doctors, but also evokes an old story. Every year around this time, there is a rash of news coverage and discussion about the “July Effect,” a term used to characterize the increased risk of medical errors as interns begin their residency training and the demands on their supervising residents and attendings increase. While I believe the July Effect is overhyped (an...
Source: The Health Care Blog - July 28, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: suchandan roy Tags: THCB Hemant Sindhu July Effect Patient Safety Source Type: blogs

Cases: Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy (BPH) as a hospice diagnosis?
Conclusion: In this case, a simple condition that is easily treatable in most men became one that we expected to lead to Mr. K’s death. However, the diagnosis that led it to become life-limiting was Mr. K’s dementia, and the heavy burden which BPH treatments would have placed on him. Mr. K’s daughter based her decision on Mr. K’s values, saying that if the father she was raised by was able to see himself in his current condition, he would have wanted both to stay in place and to be allowed to die with dignity. Forced catheterization and antipsychotic treatment might have prolonged his life by years but would have ...
Source: Pallimed: A Hospice and Palliative Medicine Blog - January 6, 2015 Category: Palliative Carer Workers Tags: cases childers emergency care hospice medications POLST urology Source Type: blogs

Medical Mispronunciations and Misspelled Words: The Definitive List.
Hearing medical mispronunciations and seeing misspelled words are an under appreciated  joy of working in healthcare.  Physicians often forget just how alien the language of medicine is to people who don't live it everyday.  The best part about being a physician is not helping people recover from critical illness. The best part is not  about  listening and understanding with compassion and empathy.  Nope, the best part about being a physician is hearing patients and other healthcare providers butcher the language of medicine and experiencing great entertainment in the process.   Doctors c...
Source: The Happy Hospitalist - October 2, 2013 Category: Internists and Doctors of Medicine Authors: Tamer Mahrous Source Type: blogs