There are 2 types of cystectomy procedures: simple and radical. In a simple cystectomy, the surgeon removes only the bladder. In a radical cystectomy, the surgeon removes the bladder and surrounding lymph nodes, prostate gland, and seminal vesicles. Sometimes all or parts of nearby organs also need to be removed.
There are many ways for the surgeon to then create a new way for urine to leave your body. Ask your healthcare provider what procedures you will be having.
The reasons for removing your bladder include:
Examples of alternatives to this surgery are:
You should ask your healthcare provider about these choices.
Make sure that you talk to your healthcare provider about the procedure, its effects on you, and the likely outcome. 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 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 these reasons, 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.
If you need a minor pain reliever in the week before surgery, choose acetaminophen rather than aspirin, ibuprofen, or naproxen. This helps avoid extra bleeding during surgery. If you are taking daily aspirin for a medical condition, ask your provider if you need to stop taking it before your surgery.
Your provider will give you laxatives and antibiotic pills to cleanse your bowels. Do not eat anything the night before the procedure, and drink only clear liquids. After midnight and the morning before the procedure, do not eat or drink anything. Do not even drink coffee, tea, or water.
Follow any other instructions your provider gives you.
You will be given a general anesthetic before the procedure. A general anesthetic will relax your muscles and put you to sleep. It will prevent you from feeling pain during the operation.
The surgeon will make a cut (incision) in your abdomen to expose the bladder and tie off the blood supply to it. Then he or she will remove the bladder (a simple cystectomy).
If you are having a radical cystectomy, the surgeon will also remove the nearby lymph nodes, the prostate gland, and two glands called the seminal vesicles.
The surgeon will make a new passageway for urine through an opening in your belly. The new passageway with the opening in the belly is called a urostomy. The surgeon makes the urostomy by cutting the ureters at the place where they enter the bladder. (The ureters are the tubes that normally drain urine from the kidneys into the bladder.) The surgeon cuts out a piece of the small bowel. The ureters are connected to the piece of bowel. One end of the piece of bowel is brought to an opening made in the skin of your belly. Urine can drain from the kidneys and out of your body through this new passageway. An ostomy bag attached to the opening in your skin will collect the urine. This is called a standard urostomy.
In some cases, the surgeon may be able to make a new bladder inside your body out of a piece of your bowel. This new bladder can collect urine. It may be connected to the urethra so that a urostomy and bag will not be needed to drain urine. Or the new bladder may be connected to a hole in your belly and urine will be drained from it with a small flexible tube called a catheter. This is a type of urostomy called a continent urostomy.
You should ask your healthcare provider what other steps you should take and when you should come back for a checkup.
You should ask your healthcare provider how these risks apply to you.
Call your provider right away if:
Call during office hours if: