Neurogenic Bladder - Saudi Urology Group
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Transcript Neurogenic Bladder - Saudi Urology Group
Prepared by
Dr. Abdullah Ghazi (R4)
Supervised by
Dr. Ali Binmahfooz
1/12/2010 KFSH&RC
Subject
Anatomy and physiology
Classification of neurogenic LUTS.
Evaluation.
Management.
Anatomy and Physiology
Bladder - Anatomy
Neuroanatomy of Voiding
Neuroanatomy of Voiding
Frontal lobe
Micturition center
Sends inhibitory signals
Pons (Pontine Micturition Center)
Excitatory center
Coordinates urinary sphincters and the bladder
Spinal cord
Intermediary between upper and lower control
Peripheral Nervous System
Somatic (S2-S4)
Pudendal nerves
Excitatory to external
sphincter
Parasympathetic (S2-S4)
Pelvic nerves
Excitatory to bladder,
relaxes sphincter
Sympathetic (T10-L2)
Hypogastric nerves to
pelvic ganglia
Inhibitory to bladder,
excitatory to urethra
Normal Voiding
SNS primarily controls bladder and the IUS
Bladder increases capacity but not pressure
Internal urinary sphincter to remain tightly closed
Parasympathetic stimulation inhibited
Somatics (pudendal N) regulate
External urinary sphincter
Pelvic diaphragm
PNS
Immediately prior to PNS stimulation, SNS is suppressed
Stimulates detrusor to contract
Pudendal nerve is inhibited external sphincter opens
facilitation of voluntary urination
Pathophysiology of Voiding
Brain lesion above pons destroys master control center
Stroke (35%)
Brain tumor (24%).
Hydrocephalus (22%).
CP (35%).
Mental retarted (50%)
Basal ganglia pathology (40%)
Result :
urge incontinence.
night incontinence.
coordinated sphincter
Pathophysiology of Voiding
Spinal cord.
Spinal cord lesion (95%).
Myelomeningocele (50%DSD).
Multiple Sclerosis (70%).
Result:
Detrusor hyperreflexia &
spastic bladder.
Detrusor Sphincteric Dyssynergia.
Some: Areflexic bladder
Pathophysiology of Voiding
Lumbosacral spinal lesion
Spinal tumor.
Herniated disc (50%).
Lumbar laminectomy (50%).
Radical hysterectomy.
Pelvic trauma
Result – areflexic bladder
Pathophysiology of Voiding
Peripheral nerve injury
Diabetes (50-25%).
Polio.
Alcohol abuse
GBS.
Classification (Madersbacher)
History
General history
Specific history
Urinary history
Bowel history:
Sexual history
Neurological history
Examination
Sensation S2-S5 on both sides of the body
Reflexes
Anal sphincter tone
Investigation
Urinalysis
Blood chemistry
Voiding diary
Residual urine (UFM).
Quantification of urine loss by pad testing if
appropriate
Urinary tract imaging studies
Urodynamic study.
Finding at Urodynamic
Filling phase
Hyposensitivity or hypersensitivity
Vegetative sensations
Low compliance
High capacity bladder
Detrusor overactivity, spontaneous or provoked
Sphincter acontractility.
Finding at Urodynamic
Voiding phase
Detrusor acontractility
DSD
Non-relaxing urethra
Non-relaxing bladder neck
GUIDELINES FOR URODYNAMICS AND URONEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Urodynamic investigation is necessary to document the
dysfunction of the LUT (A).
The recording of a bladder diary is advisable (B).
Non-invasive testing is mandatory before invasive
urodynamics is planned (A).
Video-urodynamics is the gold standard for invasive
urodynamics in patients with NLUTD. If this is available,
then a filling cystometry continuing into a pressure flow
study should be performed (A).
A physiological filling rate and body-warm saline must be
used (A).
Specific uro-neurophysiological tests are elective
procedures (C).
Mnagement
Treatment Priority
1. Protection of the upper urinary tract
2. Improvement of urinary continence
3. Restoration of (parts of) the LUT function
4. Improvement of the patient’s quality of life.
Goal of Treatment
In patients with high detrusor pressure (detrusor
overactivity, low detrusor compliance, DSD, other
causes of bladder outlet obstruction).
Aim to conversion high-pressure bladder into a passive
low-pressure reservoir despite the resulting residual
urine.
Non-invasive Conservative Treatment
Assisted bladder emptying, Credé, Valsalva.
Lower urinary tract rehabilitation
Behavioural modification techniques
Pelvic floor muscle exercises
Pelvic floor electrostimulation
Biofeedback
Drug treatment
Anticholinergic agents
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors, desmopressin.
Cholinergic drugs (bethanechol chloride).
Alpha-blockers.
Increasing bladder outlet resistance (no puplish).
Electrical neuromodulation
External appliances
GUIDELINES FOR NON-INVASIVE
CONSERVATIVE TREATMENT
The first aim of any therapy is the protection of the
upper urinary tract.
The mainstay of treatment for overactive detrusor is
anticholinergic drug therapy (A)
Lower urinary tract rehabilitation may be effective in
selected cases.
Condom catheter or pads may reduce urinary
incontinence to a socially acceptable situation.
Any method of assisted bladder emptying should be
used with the greatest caution (A).
Minimal Invasive Treatment
Catheterization
Intravesical drug treatment
Intravesical electrostimulation
Botulinum toxin injections in the bladder
Bladder neck and urethral procedures
Botulinum toxin sphincter injection
Balloon dilatation
Sphincterotomy
Stents
Bladder neck incision
Increasing bladder outlet resistance
GUIDELINES FOR CATHETERIZATION
Intermittent catheterization is the standard treatment for
patients who are unable to empty their bladder (A).
Patients should be well instructed in the technique and risks of
IC.
Aseptic IC is the method of choice (B).
The catheter size should be 12-14 Fr (B).
The frequency of IC is 4-6 times per day (B).
The bladder volume should remain below 400 mL (B).
Indwelling transurethral and suprapubic catheterization should
be used only exceptionally, under close control, and the catheter
should be changed frequently. Silicone catheters are preferred
and should be changed every 2-4 weeks, while (coated) latex
catheters need to be changed every 1-2 weeks. (A).
GUIDELINES FOR MINIMAL INVASIVE
TREATMENT
Botulinum toxin injection in the detrusor is the most
effective minimally invasive treatment to reduce
neurogenic detrusor overactivity (A).
Sphincterotomy is the standard treatment for DSD
(A).
Bladder neck incision is effective in a fibrotic bladder
neck (B).
Surgical Treatment
Urethral and bladder neck procedures
Urethral sling
Artificial urinary sphincter
Functional sphincter augmentation (gracilis m)
Bladder neck and urethra reconstruction (Extrophy)
Detrusor myectomy (auto-augmentation)
Denervation, deafferentation, neurostimulation,
neuromodulation
Bladder covering by striated muscle (rectus m)
Bladder augmentation or substitution
Urinary diversion (continent diversion, incontinent
diversion)
GUIDELINES FOR SURGICAL TREATMENT
Detrusor
Overactive
Detrusor myectomy is an acceptable option for the treatment
of overactive bladder when more conservative approaches
have failed. It is limited invasive and has minimal morbidity
(B).
- Sacral rhizotomy with SARS in complete lesions and sacral
neuromodulation in incomplete lesions are effective
treatments in selected patients (B).
Bladder augmentation is an acceptable option for decreasing
detrusor pressure whenever less invasive procedures have
failed. For the treatment of a severely thick or fibrotic bladder
wall, a bladder substitution might be considered (B).
GUIDELINES FOR SURGICAL TREATMENT
Detrusor
Underactive
SARS with rhizotomy and sacral neuromodulation are
effective in selected patients (B).
Restoration of a functional bladder by covering with striated
muscle is still experimental (4).
GUIDELINES FOR SURGICAL TREATMENT
Urethra
Overactive (DSD): like minimal invasive treatment
Underactive
The placement of a urethral sling is an established procedure
(B).
The artificial urinary sphincter is very effective (B).
Transposition of the gracilis muscle is still experimental
(Level of evidence: 4).
Referance
European Association of Urology 2010
M. Stöhrer, B. Blok, D. Castro-Diaz, E. Chartier-Kastler,
G. Del Popolo, G. Kramer, J. Pannek, P. Radziszewski,
J-J. Wyndaele
THANKS