What are the filling phase and voiding phase of micturition?
What is difference in micturition in infants and adults?
What is innervation involved in micturition?
What is stress incontinence?
Involuntary leakage on effort or exertion or sneezing/coughing.
What are investigations for stress urinary incontinence?
History & exam, positive stress test (demonstrate loss of urine on examination), urodynamics (urinary leakage during increase in intra-abdominal pressure in absence of detrusor contraction).
What is management for stress urinary incontinence?
- Surgical mid-urethral sling, colposuspension, periurethral bulking agents.
What is urge urinary incontinence (overactive bladder)?
Urinary urgency usually with urinary frequency and nocturia, with or without urge urinary incontnience
What is incidence of urge urinary incontinence?
16% in men and women over 40.
What are risk factors for urge urinary incontinence?
Age, prolapse, increased BMI, IBS, bladder irritants (caffeine, nicotine)
What is the pathology behind urge urinary incontinence?
- Cause can be idiopathic, neurogenic (loss of CNS inhibitory pathways) or bladder outlet obstruction
What are symptoms of urge urinary incontinence?
Urgency, frequency, nocturia & urgency incontinence, impact on QOL - sleep disorders, anxiety, depression.
What are investigations of urge urinary incontinence?
What is management of urge urinary incontinence?
Behaviour/lifestyle changes, bladder retraining, anti-muscarinic drugs, beta-3 agonists, BOTOX, neuromodulation (PTNS/SNS), surgical augmentation cytoplasty & urinary diversion
What is overflow incontinence?
Involuntary leakage of urine when bladder is full.
What are causes of overflow incontinence?
Usually due to chronic retention secondary to obstruction or atonic bladder. Eg. Outlet obstruction (faecal impaction/BPH), under-active detrusor muscle, bladder neck stricture, urethral stricture, drug history of alpha-adrenergics, anti-cholinergics, sedative, bladder denervation following surgery
What is continuous incontinence? Causes?
Continuous loss of urine all the time.
Can be due to vesicovaginal fistula, ectopic ureter (from kidney to urethra or vagina)
What is functional incontinence?
Due to severe cognitive impairment or mobility limitations preventing use of the toilet. Bladder function otherwise normal.
What is mixed urinary incontinence?
More than 1 type, usually in elderly
What is benign prostatic hyperplasia? what is it a common cause of?
Non-malignant growth or hyperplasia of prostate tissue, common cause of lower urinary tract symptoms in men.
What is incidence of BPH?
Increases with age, 50-60% fore males in 60s, increasing to 80-90% for those over 70 years old
What are risk factors for BPH?
Hormonal effects of testosterone on prostate
What is pathophysiology of BPH?
Hyperplasia of both lateral and median lobes leading to compression of urethra and thus bladder outflow obstruction. Hyperplasia of stroma (smooth muscle & fibrous tissue) & glands.
What are signs and symptoms of BPH?
Hesitancy in starting urination, poor stream, dribbling post-micturition. Frequency, nocturia. Can present with acute retention
What are other causes of symptoms of BPH and how do you exclude these causes?
-Bladder/prostate cancer, cauda equina, high pressure chronic retention, UTI/STI, prostatis, neurogenic bladder (secondary to PD, MS), urinary tract stones, urethral stricture.
To exclude, do abdo, pelvic and rectal examination