What Is Urinary Retention?

Urinary retention is the inability to empty the bladder completely or partially. It can be acute — a urologic emergency with sudden inability to urinate — or chronic, with progressive incomplete emptying and accumulation of elevated post-void residual.

Acute urinary retention is more common in men and is frequently associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Chronic retention can be silent, with elevated residual volumes and no acute symptoms, leading to complications such as recurrent urinary tract infections and renal impairment.

Normal urination requires coordination between detrusor (bladder muscle) contraction and urethral sphincter relaxation. Any dysfunction in this coordination — obstructive, neurogenic, or functional — can cause urinary retention.

01

Neural Control of Urination

Urination is coordinated by the pontine micturition center, with integration between sympathetic (storage), parasympathetic (contraction), and somatic (sphincter) systems.

02

Urologic Emergency

Acute urinary retention requires immediate bladder catheterization. Volumes above 1 liter require gradual decompression to prevent ex vacuo hematuria.

03

Variable Causes

Obstruction (BPH, stricture), neurogenic (spinal cord injury, diabetes), drug-induced (anticholinergics, opioids), or postoperative.

Pathophysiology

Urination is controlled by a neural circuit involving three levels: the pontine micturition center (pons), the Onuf nucleus (sacral cord S2-S4), and the peripheral nerves (pelvic, hypogastric, and pudendal). During storage, the sympathetic system (T11-L2) relaxes the detrusor and contracts the internal sphincter. During urination, the parasympathetic system (S2-S4) contracts the detrusor and the somatic system relaxes the external sphincter.

In mechanical obstruction (BPH, urethral stricture), the detrusor initially compensates with muscular hypertrophy, but progressively decompensates with fibrosis and loss of contractility. Post-void residual gradually increases until complete retention.

In neurogenic retention, interruption of neural pathways compromises detrusor-sphincter coordination. Suprasacral lesions (stroke, multiple sclerosis) cause detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia. Lower motor neuron lesions (diabetic neuropathy, cauda equina syndrome) cause an acontractile detrusor.

CLASSIFICATION OF URINARY RETENTION

TYPEMECHANISMCOMMON CAUSES
ObstructiveMechanical block to urinary flowBPH, urethral stricture, prolapse, bladder calculus
Neurogenic — UMNLesion above the sacral micturition centerStroke, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury above S2
Neurogenic — LMNLesion of the sacral reflex arcDiabetic neuropathy, cauda equina syndrome, postsurgical
Drug-inducedPharmacological effect on detrusor/sphincterAnticholinergics, opioids, alpha-agonists, antidepressants
PostoperativeReflex inhibition and anesthetic effectPelvic surgeries, spinal anesthesia, hernioplasty
10%
OF MEN > 70 YEARS WILL HAVE ACUTE URINARY RETENTION
2-3x
MORE COMMON IN MEN THAN IN WOMEN
20-30%
OF POSTOPERATIVE RETENTIONS AFTER PELVIC SURGERY
> 300 mL
POST-VOID RESIDUAL CONSIDERED SIGNIFICANT

Symptoms

Symptoms vary by presentation — acute or chronic. Acute retention is dramatic and painful. Chronic retention can be insidious, with progressive symptoms patients may attribute to normal aging.

Critérios clínicos
06 itens

Clinical Manifestations

  1. 01

    Acute inability to urinate

    Acute form: intense urge to urinate but inability to start. Severe suprapubic pain. Palpable, painful bladder. A urologic emergency.

  2. 02

    Weak and intermittent urinary stream

    In chronic obstructive retention, the stream progressively weakens. Patients may have hesitancy (delayed initiation), terminal dribbling, and a sense of incomplete emptying.

  3. 03

    Overflow incontinence

    Paradoxically, chronic retention can cause incontinence: the chronically distended bladder leaks small volumes when intravesical pressure exceeds urethral resistance.

  4. 04

    Nocturia and urinary frequency

    High residual volume reduces functional bladder capacity, causing frequent low-volume voids, especially at night.

  5. 05

    Recurrent urinary tract infections

    Residual urine is an ideal culture medium for bacteria. Recurrent infections may be the first sign of undiagnosed chronic retention.

  6. 06

    Suprapubic abdominal distension

    In significant retention, the bladder globe is often palpable and percussible above the pubic symphysis. In extreme cases, it can reach the umbilicus.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of urinary retention combines clinical examination, measurement of post-void residual, and etiologic workup. Bladder ultrasound (bladder scan) is the first-line noninvasive method to quantify the residual.

🏥Workup for Urinary Retention

Fonte: EAU and AUA Guidelines

Initial Evaluation
  • 1.Physical examination: suprapubic palpation (bladder globe), digital rectal examination (prostate)
  • 2.Post-void residual by ultrasound (normal < 50 mL; significant > 200-300 mL)
  • 3.Bladder catheterization in acute retention (measure drained volume)
  • 4.Urinalysis (infection) and renal function (creatinine)
Etiologic Workup
  • 1.PSA and prostate ultrasound (men > 50 years)
  • 2.Uroflowmetry: measures maximum urinary flow (Qmax < 10 mL/s suggests obstruction)
  • 3.Voiding cystourethrography if stricture is suspected
  • 4.Neurologic evaluation when retention has no evident obstruction
Urodynamic Study
  • 1.Cystometry: assesses bladder compliance and detrusor pressure
  • 2.Pressure-flow study: differentiates obstruction from hypocontractility
  • 3.Sphincter electromyography: assesses detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia
  • 4.Indicated when the cause is unclear or before surgery

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Differential Diagnosis

Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)

  • Men over 50 years
  • Progressive lower urinary tract symptoms
  • Enlarged prostate on digital rectal examination and ultrasound
Warning Signs
  • Acute urinary retention — emergency catheterization

Diagnostic Tests

  • PSA
  • Transrectal ultrasound
  • Flowmetry and post-void residual

Medical acupuncture may reduce irritative and obstructive urinary symptoms in mild to moderate BPH; does not replace surgical treatment in advanced cases

Urethral Stricture

  • Progressively weaker urinary stream
  • History of urethral trauma, infection, or prior instrumentation
  • Voiding cystourethrography demonstrates narrowing
Warning Signs
  • Complete inability to urinate with palpable bladder

Diagnostic Tests

  • Retrograde and voiding cystourethrography
  • Cystoscopy

Acupuncture does not resolve the anatomical stricture; it may be an adjunct for pain and bladder dysfunction after urethrotomy

Acontractile Neurogenic Bladder

  • History of spinal cord injury, diabetes, or pelvic surgery
  • Absence of detrusor contractions on urodynamics
  • Reduced or absent bladder sensation
Warning Signs
  • Severe bladder distension — risk of renal injury from reflux

Diagnostic Tests

  • Urodynamics
  • Spine MRI

Medical acupuncture at sacroiliac points may stimulate bladder contractions in neurogenic bladder from incomplete injury

Anticholinergic Drugs

  • Onset of retention after starting an anticholinergic or opioid medication
  • Hypoactive bladder without identified organic cause
  • Resolution after drug discontinuation
Warning Signs
  • Use of multiple anticholinergics in older adults

Diagnostic Tests

  • Review of medication list
  • Monitored pharmacological withdrawal trial

Acupuncture may help bladder function recover while tapering drugs that cause retention

Severe Constipation

  • Palpable fecal impaction in rectum on physical examination
  • Recent-onset urinary symptoms associated with constipation
  • Retention improves after fecal impaction resolves
Warning Signs
  • Fecal impaction in bedridden older adults with distended bladder

Diagnostic Tests

  • Physical examination (digital rectal examination)
  • Plain abdominal radiograph

Acupuncture at bowel-regulating points (ST-36, ST-25, TE-6) may relieve constipation and, indirectly, improve bladder function

BPH and Retention: The Most Frequent Cause in Men

Benign prostatic hyperplasia is the most common cause of urinary retention in men over 50. Adenomatous growth in the transition zone of the prostate progressively compresses the prostatic urethra, increasing resistance to bladder emptying. The detrusor muscle initially compensates by hypertrophying; over time the bladder decompensates, resulting in incomplete emptying, increased post-void residual, and, in severe cases, acute urinary retention.

Medical acupuncture has evidence of improving lower urinary tract symptoms associated with BPH, especially irritative components (urgency, frequency, nocturia). Points such as Zhongji (CV-3), Pangguangshu (BL-28), and Sanyinjiao (SP-6) are used to improve detrusor tone and reduce functional obstruction. In cases of significant anatomical obstruction, surgical treatment remains the definitive option.

Acontractile Neurogenic Bladder: When the Detrusor Fails

Acontractile neurogenic bladder — in which the detrusor muscle loses the ability to contract adequately — is one of the most challenging causes of chronic urinary retention. Main etiologies include: lower spinal cord injury (conus and cauda equina), diabetic autonomic polyneuropathy, complications of extensive pelvic surgery (radical hysterectomy, prostatectomy), and radiation injuries. Clean intermittent catheterization is the cornerstone of standard treatment in these situations.

Medical acupuncture, especially electroacupuncture at sacroiliac points, has demonstrated in prospective studies the ability to stimulate bladder contractions in patients with incomplete neurologic injury — particularly in S2-S4 type lesions. The proposed mechanism involves neuromodulation of the pelvic and pudendal nerves, with potential for partial functional recovery in selected cases.

Drugs: Medication Review Is a Mandatory Step

A frequently overlooked cause of urinary retention, especially in older adults, is medication side effects. The main pharmacological groups implicated include: anticholinergics (tricyclic antidepressants, antipsychotics, antihistamines, overactive-bladder drugs), opioid analgesics, nasal decongestants with pseudoephedrine (stimulate urethral alpha-adrenoceptors), and calcium channel blockers. In polymedicated older adults, the combination of multiple drugs with anticholinergic effects can be enough to precipitate acute urinary retention.

Reviewing the medication list — known in geriatrics as "deprescribing" — is often the most effective step in managing drug-induced retention. Medical acupuncture may aid bladder function recovery during drug adjustment, offering neurophysiologic support as detrusor contractility resumes.

Treatment

Treatment of urinary retention is directed at the cause. Immediate decompression by catheterization is the priority in acute retention. Definitive treatment may involve pharmacotherapy, intermittent catheterization, or surgery, according to the etiology.

Bladder Decompression
Immediate — acute retention

Relief or indwelling bladder catheterization. If volume > 1 liter, use gradual decompression (intermittent clamping) to prevent ex vacuo hematuria and hypotension. Monitor initial urine output.

Pharmacological Therapy
First line — retention from BPH

Alpha-blockers (tamsulosin, doxazosin): relax smooth muscle of the bladder neck and prostatic urethra. 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors (finasteride): reduce prostatic volume long-term. Cholinergics (bethanechol): for hypocontractile detrusor — limited efficacy.

Clean Intermittent Catheterization
Chronic neurogenic retention

Patient self-catheterization 4-6 times a day. Gold standard for neurogenic bladder. Preserves renal function and reduces infections compared with indwelling catheters. Requires training and manual dexterity.

Surgical Treatment
When pharmacotherapy fails

TURP (transurethral resection of the prostate) for obstructive BPH. Urethrotomy or urethroplasty for strictures. Sacral neuromodulation for selected functional and neurogenic retention.

Acupuncture as Treatment

Acupuncture acts on urinary retention by modulating the micturition reflex at the sacral segments S2-S4. Stimulation of points such as CV3 (Zhongji), CV4 (Guanyuan), SP6 (Sanyinjiao), and BL32 (Ciliao) activates afferents that facilitate detrusor contraction and sphincter relaxation.

The mechanism involves modulation of the sacral parasympathetic nervous system. Electroacupuncture at sacral points (BL32, BL33) directly stimulates the S2-S3 nerves — analogous to surgical sacral neuromodulation — promoting bladder contractions and detrusor-sphincter coordination.

Acupuncture is particularly studied in postoperative and post-stroke urinary retention. Clinical trials demonstrate that early acupuncture (within 24 hours) after surgery may significantly reduce the incidence of postoperative retention and the need for catheterization.

Prognosis

Prognosis depends on the cause. Postoperative retention resolves spontaneously in 70-80% of cases within 48 hours. BPH-related retention treated with alpha-blockers has a 50-70% chance of spontaneous urination after catheter removal.

In neurogenic retention, intermittent catheterization may be required long-term. Acupuncture and neuromodulation can reduce catheterization dependence in selected cases. Regular renal-function monitoring is essential to prevent obstructive nephropathy.

Myths and Facts

Myth vs. Fact

MYTH

Urinary retention only happens in older men.

FACT

Although more common in men because of BPH, retention can occur at any age and in either sex. Postpartum women, postoperative patients, people with diabetic neuropathy, and users of certain medications are also affected.

Myth vs. Fact

MYTH

A bladder catheter is the only solution for chronic retention.

FACT

Clean intermittent catheterization (self-catheterization) is preferable to indwelling catheters in chronic retention — it reduces infections and better preserves bladder function. Treatments such as alpha-blockers, neuromodulation, and acupuncture may also restore spontaneous urination.

Myth vs. Fact

MYTH

Drinking less water prevents urinary retention.

FACT

Fluid restriction does not prevent retention and may worsen it by concentrating urine, favoring infections and crystallization. Maintain adequate hydration. Treating the underlying cause (obstruction, neuropathy) is what prevents retention.

When to Seek Help

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS · 10

Frequently Asked Questions

Urinary retention is the total or partial inability to empty the bladder adequately. It has two forms: acute and chronic. Acute retention is a medical emergency — the patient cannot urinate, feels intense suprapubic pain, and the bladder becomes palpable and distended, requiring immediate relief catheterization. Chronic retention is generally painless, with progressive incomplete emptying, increased post-void residual, and, in severe cases, overflow dribbling (urinary retention with overflow). Distinguishing the two forms is fundamental for management.

Causes differ significantly between the sexes. In men, benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) accounts for 50% to 70% of cases — prostate growth progressively compresses the urethra. Urethral stricture from prior trauma or infection is the second most common cause. In women, pelvic organ prolapse (cystocele, uterine prolapse) can kink the urethra and cause obstruction. In both sexes, neurologic causes (spinal cord injury, diabetic neuropathy, pelvic surgery sequelae) and pharmacological causes (anticholinergics, opioids) are also relevant.

Medical acupuncture is proposed as a neuromodulatory tool targeting the nerves involved in detrusor contractility and vesicosphincteric coordination. Stimulation of sacroiliac points (BL-31 to BL-34) acts on the S2-S4 pelvic nerves. Prospective trials suggest that sacral electroacupuncture may improve bladder contractility in selected patients with neurogenic bladder from incomplete spinal cord injury, though evidence remains limited. In postoperative or postpartum retention, clinical studies report symptom relief and reduced catheterization in some patients, generally within a few sessions.

Yes. Postoperative urinary retention (POUR) is a common complication after abdominopelvic and orthopedic surgery and spinal anesthesia, affecting 5% to 70% of patients depending on the procedure. Clinical studies show that medical acupuncture performed in the first hours after surgery — stimulating Sanyinjiao (SP-6), Zhongji (CV-3), and sacroiliac points — significantly reduces POUR rates and time to first spontaneous urination. Acupuncture is also effective for postpartum retention, a frequent complication after epidural and instrumental vaginal delivery.

No. Most men with BPH never develop complete urinary retention. The risk of acute retention in men with symptomatic BPH is approximately 1% to 2% per year. Risk factors include: PSA above 1.4 ng/mL (a marker of elevated prostatic volume), very weak urinary stream on flowmetry, increased post-void residual, and medications that worsen obstruction (anticholinergics, nasal decongestants). Early BPH treatment with alpha-blockers or 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors reduces retention risk. Medical acupuncture may serve as an adjuvant to reduce associated irritative urinary symptoms.

Clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) is bladder emptying with a urinary catheter performed at regular intervals by the patient or caregiver. It is the standard treatment for acontractile neurogenic bladder with chronic retention. The technique is safe when performed correctly, with a lower infection rate than indwelling catheterization (long-term catheter). Frequency ranges from 4 to 6 times a day, depending on bladder capacity. The physician acupuncturist can complement CIC by stimulating bladder contractility recovery and potentially reducing catheterization frequency over time.

Yes — medications are a frequently overlooked cause of urinary retention, especially in older adults. The main groups include: anticholinergics (tricyclic antidepressants, antipsychotics, first-generation antihistamines, overactive-bladder drugs such as oxybutynin), opioid analgesics, decongestants with ephedrine/pseudoephedrine, high-dose calcium channel blockers, and spinal anesthetics. In men with BPH, any drug with anticholinergic action can precipitate acute retention. Careful medication review is a mandatory step when evaluating any patient with urinary retention.

Yes, in severe and untreated cases. Chronic high-volume urinary retention — above 300 mL of post-void residual — generates retrograde pressure on the ureters and renal pelvis, causing hydronephrosis and, progressively, obstructive nephropathy. Renal injury can be irreversible if obstruction persists for months to years. Warning signs include elevated urea and creatinine on blood tests, hydronephrosis on ultrasound, and recurrent urinary tract infections. One of the most urgent indications for catheterization is chronic retention with renal impairment confirmed on testing.

Complete recovery depends on the cause and duration. Acute retention from reversible causes — pharmacological, postoperative, postpartum, or constipation-related — frequently resolves completely once the trigger is removed, with or without additional treatment. BPH-related retention has good recovery after adequate clinical or surgical treatment. Neurogenic retention has a variable prognosis — complete injuries generally require permanent intermittent catheterization, while incomplete injuries may recover partial or full micturition function with rehabilitation, including medical electroacupuncture.

Seek emergency care immediately if you cannot urinate for more than 6 to 8 hours and feel a full bladder, especially with intense suprapubic pain or pressure — these are signs of acute urinary retention that require urgent relief catheterization. Also seek urgent care for continuous uncontrolled dribbling of a few drops of urine (possible overflow retention), blood in the urine, fever with voiding difficulty (upper urinary tract infection), or sudden urinary symptoms with loss of genital or lower-limb sensation (neurologic emergency).