19 research outputs found

    Overactive bladder – 18 years – part I

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    ABSTRACT Traditionally, the treatment of overactive bladder syndrome has been based on the use of oral medications with the purpose of reestablishing the detrusor stability. The recent better understanding of the urothelial physiology fostered conceptual changes, and the oral anticholinergics – pillars of the overactive bladder pharmacotherapy – started to be not only recognized for their properties of inhibiting the detrusor contractile activity, but also their action on the bladder afference, and therefore, on the reduction of the symptoms that constitute the syndrome. Beta-adrenergic agonists, which were recently added to the list of drugs for the treatment of overactive bladder, still wait for a definitive positioning – as either a second-line therapy or an adjuvant to oral anticholinergics. Conservative treatment failure, whether due to unsatisfactory results or the presence of adverse side effects, define it as refractory overactive bladder. In this context, the intravesical injection of botulinum toxin type A emerged as an effective option for the existing gap between the primary measures and more complex procedures such as bladder augmentation. Sacral neuromodulation, described three decades ago, had its indication reinforced in this overactive bladder era. Likewise, the electric stimulation of the tibial nerve is now a minimally invasive alternative to treat those with refractory overactive bladder. The results of the systematic literature review on the oral pharmacological treatment and the treatment of refractory overactive bladder gave rise to this second part of the review article Overactive Bladder – 18 years, prepared during the 1st Latin-American Consultation on Overactive Bladder

    Urodynamics Techniques and Clinical Applications

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    Urodynamic investigations are indicated when empiric or conservative treatment fails to improve a patient’s lower urinary tract symptoms and invasive treatment is considered. Based on the expected underlying lower urinary tract dysfunction, the clinician designs a urodynamic evaluation from the range of available tests, with the aim to reproduce the patient’s symptoms and to identify the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. Other functions of the lower urinary tract are also analysed, as they may be relevant for planning and discussing further treatment options. In this book chapter, we describe the available urodynamic tests, the normal findings, and the evidence for the role of urodynamics in different lower urinary tract disorders
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