tangerine wrote:
I'm confused by your replies Brian. I've not heard of a high or low pressure system? Just a suprapubic foley catheter or occasionally a Button - unless you're thinking of a urostomy?
. In fact I know someone who uses nappy style protection for bowels and bypassing in addition to having a catheter + someone else who is about to do the same.
There are two basically different ways to have a suprapubic "installed". Both have that button pee hold near the belly button. However, the first way is to connect your existing (and usually intact) bladder to the suprapubic so you can drain your bladder this new way using catheters. This is more commonly know as a normal or high pressure system as pressure will still build up in your bladder if you don't drain it often enough.
The second method is to completely bypass or remove the bladder (usually when it isn't working or if you get painful urges). And yes this is called a urostomy as well. This method uses a piece of your intestines to create a small pouch your kidneys will drain into. This pouch is then connected to (or is an extension of) the suprapubic. It is intended to constantly drain so pressure will not build up towards your kidneys. The urostomy is the procedure to create a low pressure urinary system, and actually does not require catheters (though you actually can still use them if you want to).
I'm also aware of and have extensively researched the intestinal bypass too. This is where you have the kidneys dumping directly into the intestines. It can allow for "some" urinary control, but is often fraught with low level leaking from behind since those muscles aren't really designed to hold back liquids very well (as well as constant trips to the toilet). I'm surprised someone would have both a bypass and suprapubic though. Not even sure how that would work since both would be effectively bypassing the bladder in two separate ways.