The Raz procedure is a type of surgery done to help a bladder control problem called stress incontinence. Stress incontinence is the term used for leakage of urine during exercise, coughing, sneezing, laughing, or lifting. The surgery returns the bladder and urethra to a more normal position.
This operation may be performed if you have trouble holding urine. Your healthcare provider may recommend surgery when attempts to strengthen these tissues with exercise or other nonoperative treatments have not succeeded.
Examples of alternatives are:
You can also choose not to have treatment. You should ask your healthcare provider about these choices.
Plan for your care and recovery after the operation. Find someone to drive you home after the surgery. Allow for time to rest and try to find people to help you with your day-to-day duties.
Follow your healthcare provider's instructions about not smoking before and after the procedure. Smokers heal more slowly after surgery. They are also more likely to have breathing problems during surgery. For this reason, if you are a smoker, you should quit at least 2 weeks before the procedure. It is best to quit 6 to 8 weeks before surgery. Also, your wounds will heal much better if you do not smoke after the surgery.
Follow any other instructions your provider gives you. Eat a light meal, such as soup or salad, the night before the procedure. Do not eat or drink anything after midnight and the morning before the procedure. Do not even drink coffee, tea, or water.
You are given a regional or general anesthetic. A regional anesthetic numbs part of your body while you remain awake. A general anesthetic relaxes your muscles, makes you feel as if you are in a deep sleep, and prevents you from feeling pain.
The surgeon places a small lighted tube (cystoscope) in the urethra and bladder during the procedure to help him or her see your organs and to prevent sutures (stitches) from being placed through the urethra. Your surgeon makes a small incision in the skin of your abdomen just above the pubic bone. Another small incision is made inside the vagina. In between these two cuts a strong stitch is placed encircling the urethra and much of the supporting tissues. The small vaginal and abdominal incisions are then closed.
A catheter (drainage tube) may be placed into your bladder through the skin over it so the urine will drain through the catheter and not through the urethra while you heal.
You may stay in the hospital about 1 to 2 days. The catheter may stay in your bladder for 1 to 2 weeks after surgery.
After going home, do not lift anything heavier than 10 pounds and avoid strenuous activity for 8 to 10 weeks. Ask your healthcare provider what other steps you should take and when you should go back for a checkup.
You should be better able to hold urine when you cough, laugh, sneeze, or exercise. Bulging and feelings of pressure in the vagina should be relieved.
One of the advantages of the Raz procedure over other surgical treatments is that it involves less surgical manipulation of the bladder, other female organs, and the abdominal cavity. For this reason it is less likely to cause serious complications.
You should ask your healthcare provider how these risks apply to you.
Call your healthcare provider right away if:
Call your healthcare provider during office hours if: