Catheterization of the urethra in female pigs

Female pigs are commonly utilized as an animal model for biomedical research and require urethral catheterization. Sixteen pigs were anaesthetized for research purposes and required the placement of a urethral catheter. Post-mortem examination of the vaginas revealed the urethral opening to be consistently halfway from the mucocutaneous junction of the vulva to the cervix. A shallow diverticulum was also observed on the ventral floor of the urethral opening. To optimize conditions for success the pig should be carefully positioned supine, a vaginal speculum and light source should be used, the pig should be adequately anaesthetized, and the anatomy of the vagina should be reviewed.

[1]  J. Hamdorf,et al.  Laparoscopic surgery for orthotopic kidney transplant in the pig model. , 2013, The Journal of surgical research.

[2]  A. Unsal,et al.  In vivo Porcine Model for Practicing Retrograde Intrarenal Surgery , 2013, Urologia Internationalis.

[3]  G. Musk,et al.  Laparoscopic kidney orthotopic transplant: preclinical study in the pig model. , 2013, Transplantation proceedings.

[4]  L. Mou,et al.  Laparoscopic Surgery for Kidney Orthotopic Transplant in the Pig Model , 2012, JSLS : Journal of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons.

[5]  L. Pączek,et al.  Urethral distension as a novel method to simulate sphincter insufficiency in the porcine animal model , 2012, International journal of urology : official journal of the Japanese Urological Association.

[6]  Sutchin R. Patel,et al.  Dietary induction of long-term hyperoxaluria in the porcine model. , 2012, Journal of endourology.

[7]  F. Clubb,et al.  Swine as Models in Biomedical Research and Toxicology Testing , 2012, Veterinary pathology.

[8]  N. Rijkhoff,et al.  Detecting the Onset of Urinary Bladder Contractions Using an Implantable Pressure Sensor , 2011, IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering.

[9]  A. Alstrup,et al.  Basic Surgical Techniques in the Göttingen Minipig: Intubation, Bladder Catheterization, Femoral Vessel Catheterization, and Transcardial Perfusion , 2011, Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE.

[10]  J. Takala,et al.  Increasing abdominal pressure with and without PEEP: effects on intra-peritoneal, intra-organ and intra-vascular pressures , 2010, BMC gastroenterology.

[11]  S. Hanneman,et al.  Comparison of methods of temperature measurement in swine , 2004, Laboratory animals.

[12]  H. Moll,et al.  Large animal urogenital surgery , 1998 .