Publikasi Scopus 2024 per tanggal 31 Mei 2024 (409 artikel)

Khasanah N.; Djaali W.; Viventius Y.
Khasanah, Nur (58020751600); Djaali, Wahyuningsih (57212479564); Viventius, Yoshua (57223088537)
58020751600; 57212479564; 57223088537
Electroacupuncture Therapy for Urinary Retention in an Elderly Patient
2024
Medical Acupuncture
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108
112
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Medical Acupuncture Specialist Program, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Department of Medical Acupuncture, Rumah Sakit Umum Pusat Nasional, DKI, Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo, Central Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia
Khasanah N., Medical Acupuncture Specialist Program, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Djaali W., Medical Acupuncture Specialist Program, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Viventius Y., Department of Medical Acupuncture, Rumah Sakit Umum Pusat Nasional, DKI, Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo, Central Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia
Background: Urinary retention is the inability to urinate voluntarily and difficulty in urinating even when the bladder is full. Acute urinary retention is most common in men aged 60-80. In the past 5 years, 10% of men older than age 70 and almost a third of men in their 80s have experienced acute urinary retention. Risk factors include prostate enlargement, increasing age, African-American race, obesity, diabetes mellitus, high alcohol consumption, and lack of physical activity. Treatment for urinary retention is mainly urethral catheterization, but it can be uncomfortable for a patient in the long term. Case: A 68-year-old man was unable to urinate voluntarily for 3 months and was diagnosed with urinary retention caused by a hypotonic bladder and was initially given a catheter. The patient then received manual acupuncture therapy in acupoints ST-28, CV-3, CV-4 and CV-6, and electroacupuncture (EA) therapy in acupoints SP-6, SP-9, BL-23, BL-25, BL-31, BL-32, BL-33, and BL34, with a continuous-wave, at a frequency of 2 Hz. Acupuncture therapy was carried out for 12 sessions, twice per week. Results: After 5 sessions of acupuncture therapy, the patient's urinary retention was resolved. He felt the urge to urinate and was able to urinate voluntarily even after removing the catheter, He also experienced an increase in his quality of life, as shown on an EQ-5D questionnaire with an increased score from 50 to 80. Conclusions: A combination of manual acupuncture and EA in an elderly patient can be a safe choice to reduce or resolve symptoms of urinary retention. Copyright 2024, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers.
elderly patient; electroacupuncture; urinary retention
carbamazepine; acupuncture; acupuncture point; African American; aged; Article; bladder neck stenosis; case report; catheter removal; ciliao acupoint; clinical article; clinical effectiveness; clinical outcome; continuous wave; cystoscopy; electroacupuncture; European Quality of Life 5 Dimensions questionnaire; geriatric assessment; geriatric patient; guanyuan acupoint; hematuria; hemifacial spasm; human; hypotonic bladder; male; microvascular decompression; patient safety; postoperative period; qihai acupoint; quality of life; sanyinjiao acupoint; shangliao acupoint; shenshu acupoint; shuidao acupoint; therapy effect; transurethral resection; treatment response; urethra stenosis; urethral catheterization; urethrotomy; urinary urgency; urine retention; xialiao acupoint; yinlingquan acupoin
Universitas Indonesia, UI, (NKB-693/UN2.RST/HKP.05.00/2023); Universitas Indonesia, UI
This work was funded by a grant from the Universitas Indonesia (Grant No: NKB-693/UN2.RST/HKP.05.00/2023; “Hibah Publikasi Terindeks Internasional (PUTI) Q2).”
Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
19336586
Article
Q3
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16474