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ARTICLE |

A PROBE-GROOVE-DIRECTOR FOR URETERAL CATHETERIZATION

I. Ridgeway Trimble, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;92(12):982. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.92700380003012d.
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The probe-groove-director was devised in order to enable one to locate more easily a ureteral orifice in the female bladder, to hold it in a position for catheterization, and then to have a guide for the catheter as it rides into the ureter.

With the patient in the knee-chest position, the urethra is dilated and the Kelly cystoscope passed in the usual manner, as originally described by Dr. Kelly.1 One of the ureteral orifices is then located, and its location may be facilitated by means of the probe on the end of this new instrument. The blunt probe with its malleable stem is passed into the ureteral orifice up to the junction of the base of the probe and the grooved portion of the instrument. The handle is then best held by an assistant while the catheter is next passed along the groove by the operator. The tip

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