Cystocoele and Sensory Urgency – Our Experience

Abstract

Sensory urgency appears mostly in patients with a specific or non specific cystitis, interstitial cystitis, intravesical foreign bodies, bladder carcinoma and carcinoma of the prostate, infravesical obstruction, estrogen deficiency and in some neurologic and psychiatric diseases. The aim of this study was to analyze and explain the relation between vaginal vault prolapse and sensory urgency. Clinical courses of 64 patients with cystocoele, which between 1999 and January 2006 have been treated on the Clinic of urology, University Hospital, Rijeka, Croatia, were analyzed retrospectively. On physical examination, using the International Society for Continence staging system we found that 4 (0.6%) had grade II, 29 (45.3%) had grade III, and 31 (48.4%) had grade IV cystocoele. Forty-seven (73.4%) women had urgency, for minimally 6 months to many years before the vaginal vault prolapse manifestation. In all but 3 (4.6%) an extended anterior vaginal colporaphy has been done, with only 1 (1.6%) recurrence of cystocele. It seems that sensory urgency may in fact be a predictor of cystocele

    Similar works