When your doctor introduces a catheter as part of your treatment, you likely have an issue with bladder retention. A catheter frees urine that illness, injury, pregnancy, or other complications prevent your body from releasing properly. Depending on your need for a catheter, you may use one of two treatment types; a long-term catheter or an intermittent catheter.
Female intermittent catheters allow self-sufficiency in managing your urinary ailments. It works by inserting the catheter tube into your urethra. This action signals the bladder to empty through the catheter and into the awaiting bag.
Make sure your doctor or nurse provides a full understanding of the correct way to use your intermittent catheter. To see the best results in this form of urinary treatment, ensure you know the following:
• How to insert the catheter
• Where to place the catheter once it is inserted
• How to dispose of your used catheter tube and accessories
• How many times a day is expected to empty the bladder
One of the benefits of the female intermittent catheter is the smaller chance in the risk of infection. You will continually insert and extract the catheter tube multiple times each day. The catheter doesn’t stay inside your body. This reduces the development of urinary tract infections or UTIs.
Unlike intermittent catheters, long-term or indwelling catheters are implanted by your doctor surgically. Long-term catheters increase the chance of infections because of the tube being placed inside your body.
Managing a bladder disease is complicated. Buying your medical supplies should not be. At LNS Medical Supply, we can ship your catheters quickly and discreetly. Contact LNS Medical Supply at https://www.lnsmedicalsupply.com for more information.