Prophylactic tamsulosin in cataract surgery under general anesthesia for preventing urinary retention: a randomized clinical trial
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Abstract
AIM: To examine the effect of prophylactic tamsulosin in male candidates of cataract surgery on general anesthesia in preventing urinary retention.METHODS: In this double blind clinical trial, 67 male candidates of cataract surgery under general anesthesia randomly received oral tamsulosin (0.4mg daily for one week prior to cataract surgery, n=32), or placebo (n=35). Rates of post-operative urinary retention and floppy iris syndrome were compared between the two groups. RESULTS: The two groups were matched for the patients' age (tamsulosin group: 68.16آ±8.72 years, placebo group: 71.37آ±8.60 years, P=0.38). Post-operative urinary retention occurred less frequently in tamsulosin receivers (3.1% vs 48.6%, P<0.001, Odds ratio=29.28, 95% CI 3.59-238.79). There was only one case (2.9%) with floppy iris syndrome in the control group (P=0.52, Odds ratio=1.03 95% CI 0.97-1.09). CONCLUSION: Short-term prophylactic administration of oral tamsulosin before cataract surgery on general anesthesia is effective in preventing post-operative urinary retention without increasing the risk of floppy iris syndrome.
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placebo, tamsulosin, aged, article, cataract extraction, controlled study, double blind procedure, drug effect, general anesthesia, human, intraoperative floppy iris syndrome, major clinical study, male, postoperative complication, prophylaxis, randomized controlled trial, risk assessment, urine retention