## Correct Answer: D. Wait and watch Blood at the urethral meatus (BUM) following blunt perineal trauma is a **red flag sign** for urethral injury. However, the critical discriminator here is that the patient has **no pain and no obvious injury**—suggesting a minor anterior urethral injury or mucosal abrasion. In such cases, the standard Indian urological practice (per Bailey & Love and standard urology protocols) is **conservative management with wait-and-watch** initially. The rationale: most minor anterior urethral injuries (distal to the external urethral sphincter) heal spontaneously with rest, hydration, and observation. Blind catheterization or instrumentation risks converting a partial tear into a complete urethral stricture—a major complication. The patient should be observed for signs of urinary retention, fever, or periurethral extravasation. If retention develops or signs of complete disruption emerge (inability to void, suprapubic distension), then imaging (retrograde urethrography) and intervention (suprapubic catheterization) become necessary. This conservative-first approach is standard in Indian trauma centers and aligns with international guidelines for hemodynamically stable patients with isolated anterior urethral injury. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Suprapubic cystostomy** — Suprapubic catheterization is reserved for **complete urethral disruption** or when the patient cannot void despite conservative management. Performing it immediately in a patient with only blood at meatus and no retention is **over-treatment** and commits the patient to a surgical procedure that may be unnecessary. It should be the second-line intervention, not first-line. **B. Nephrogram** — A nephrogram (intravenous urography) is indicated for **suspected upper urinary tract injury** (renal/ureteric trauma), not anterior urethral injury. Blood at the meatus is a sign of lower urinary tract (urethral) pathology. Nephrogram would be inappropriate and delays appropriate management of the actual problem. **C. Foley's catheterization** — **Blind catheterization is contraindicated** in suspected urethral injury because it risks converting a partial tear into complete disruption and causing iatrogenic stricture formation. This is a cardinal rule in Indian trauma protocols. Catheterization should only be attempted after confirming urethral integrity via retrograde urethrography, or avoided entirely if conservative management succeeds. ## High-Yield Facts - **Blood at urethral meatus (BUM)** is a red flag for urethral injury; do NOT blindly catheterize. - **Anterior urethral injuries** (distal to external sphincter) often heal spontaneously with conservative management; posterior injuries require urgent intervention. - **Retrograde urethrography (RUG)** is the gold standard to confirm urethral integrity before catheterization or to grade injury severity. - **Suprapubic catheterization** is reserved for complete urethral disruption or failed conservative management with retention. - **Wait-and-watch** with observation for retention, fever, and periurethral swelling is the initial management for hemodynamically stable patients with isolated anterior urethral injury. ## Mnemonics **BUM Rule** **B**lood at **U**rethral **M**eatus → Do NOT catheterize blindly. Observe first, image if retention develops, catheterize suprapubically only if complete disruption confirmed. **CURE for Urethral Injury** **C**onservative (wait-watch) → **U**rethrography (if retention) → **R**etrograde imaging → **E**xploration/SPC (if needed). Use this stepwise approach. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "blood at meatus" with immediate catheterization to trap students who confuse the sign with the management. The trap is assuming any sign of urethral injury mandates immediate intervention, when in fact hemodynamic stability and absence of retention favor conservative management. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian trauma centers, the "golden rule" is: blood at meatus = no blind catheterization. Many iatrogenic urethral strictures result from well-meaning but premature catheterization. Conservative management with hydration and observation prevents this complication in the majority of anterior urethral injuries. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 61 (Urology); Harrison Ch. 279 (Genitourinary Trauma)_
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