Vaginal pessaries represent a valid therapeutic option for the management of female pelvic organ prolapse in elderly women with significant comorbidities. Although leading to good functional and quality of life outcomes, when neglected, they can cause significant and severe complications.1
An 87-year-old woman semidependent and uncooperative due to progressive Alzheimer’s dementia, who has lived in a nursing home for the last 5 years, presented to our outpatient clinic for ‘intermittent hematuria’. She carried a pelvic ultrasound documenting a ‘polypoid formation with 23 mm on the posterior bladder wall suggesting a bladder tumour’.
The blood loss had been detected intermittently in the diaper that she uses for hygienic purposes.
There were no analytical abnormalities except for leucoerythrocyturia with positive Escherichia coli urine culture. The hypothesis of a urothelial lesion led to the scheduling of a cystoscopy under anaesthesia and an abdominopelvic CT scan.
The abdominopelvic CT scan documented...
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