What are some of the causes of altered voiding?
Brain/spinal cord damage/peripheral nerve lesion
Blockage in kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra
Prostate problems
Pelvic floor muscle problems
What are lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS)?
LUTS involve problems with the bladder, prostate and urethra ->
Storage LUTS = incontinence, urgency, frequency, nocturia
Voiding LUTS = poor stream, hesitancy, dysuria, intermittency, double voiding (needing to go straight after going once), retention, straining, incomplete emptying
Post-micturition LUTS = terminal dribbling
What is urinary incontinence and how can it affect a patient?
Involuntary loss of urine in sufficient amount of frequency to constitute a social/health problem -> major cause of morbidity + institutionalisation, not usually life-threatening but quality of life impact (skin breakdown, pressure sores, numerous social + population issues)
What is the prevalence of urinary incontinence?
Increases with age (not normal at any age)
What are the different types of incontinence?
Stress incontinence (sphincters)
Urge incontinence (overactive bladder) - mixed (urgency and exertion problems)
Overflow incontinence
Functional incontinence
Continuous incontinence (constant leakage due to congenital, spinal cord injury, bladder fistula etc.)
Childhood incontinence/abnormal bedwetting (can indicate emotional problems)
What is stress incontinence, how is it caused, who is most likely to experience it and how can you manage i
What is urge incontinence, how is it caused, who is most likely to experience it and how can you manage it?
What is overflow incontinence, how it is caused and who is most likely to experience it?
What is functional incontinence, how is it caused and who is most likely to experience it?
How can you investigate incontinence?
What is involved in a frequency-volume chart?
How much you have drunk
How much urine passed
If/when there was leakage
What is a urodynamics investigation and how is it performed?
Study of pressure and flow during storage, transport and expulsion of urine in the LUT: Fill bladder (+/- contrast for imaging) -> pee -> urine flow rate -> residual urine - detrusor function measured at inflow + outflow cystometry
What is outflow cystometry and how is it performed?
Urethral catheter into bladder + transducer in rectum/vagina -> fill bladder with fluid (+/- contrast for imaging) -> record pressure in bladder + rectum/vagina -> bladder emptied and pressures recorded = bladder pressure combines abdominal + detrusor pressure whereas rectal pressure is from abdominal muscles so bladder - rectum = detrusor
What are some of the relevant neurological problems and their consequences?
Damage to brain, spinal cord and sacral region can lead to -> incontinence, retention, UTI, kidney damage (hydrostatic pressure, pyelonephritis), stones (urine stasis) + cancer (metabolite retention)
How can you manage continuous incontinence?
Usually requires surgical treatment of underlying anatomical disorder Catheterisation
How can you manage urinary retention e.g. in BPH, overflow incontinence?
Restore bladder emptying e.g. intermittent self-catheterisation, surgical treatment of bladder outflow obstruction or long-term catheter
a blockers e.g. Doxazosin
How can oxybutynin be used to treat urge incontinence/overactive bladder and what are its side effects?
What causes urinary obstruction?
Obstruction BPH (BPE to patient) Prostate cancer Prostatitis Haematuria causing clots (think bladder cancer if patient is ~40-45 yrs) Tumours Stones Structural (anatomy), physical or neurological
What is BPH, who is most likely to experience it and what are the symptoms?
What is involved in the international prostate symptom score?
International prostate symptom score where there is 7 symptom questions: frequency, nocturia, urgency, hesitancy, poor stream, intermittency + incomplete emptying (score each one)
& 1 QOL question: If you were to spend the rest of your life with your urinary condition like this, how would you feel about that?
How do you examine/investigate BPH?
How do you manage BPH and what are some of the complications of this?
How can Doxazosin be used to treat urinary retention and BPH?
What should a normal and abnormal prostate feel like? How can you differentiate between BPH and cancer?
Healthy: soft, smooth, symmetrical, regular + even
Abnormal: hard, lumpy + irregular
Peripheral zone: largest area, felt during rectal exam, most cancers start here so PZ will enlarge
Transition zone: surrounds urethra, increases with age and BPH
BPH causes symptoms but cancer has few although can be felt on prostate DRE