Objectives: To evaluate the efficacy of anticholinergic agents in the treatment of neurogenic overactive bladder (NOAB) and neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients on clean intermittent catheterisation (CIC). Methods: Chronic suprasacral SCI patients on CIC presenting with at least one urinary leakage a day were included. Urodynamics and voiding diaries were performed at baseline and 1 month follow-up. In case of NDO at baseline, an anticholinergic drug was prescribed. Results: The 231 SCI patients presented with one to five urinary leakages per day (mean 2.1). Urodynamics showed NDO in all patients. A new anticholinergic treatment was started in all, either in monotherapy (134 patients) or in association with the existing anticholinergic drug (oxybutynin þ trospium bitherapy, 97 patients). The mean maximum bladder capacity significantly increased from 225 to 441 ml, and the mean involuntary detrusor contractions (IDC) significantly decreased from 67 to 41 cm H 2 O. Only 75 SCI patients (32%) were fully continent. However, 25 out of these 75 patients showed persistent NDO, with amplitudes of IDC above 40 cm H 2 O in 12 patients. Incontinence was still found in 156 SCI patients (67%), with an average of 1,2 leakages a day. In 100 patients, amplitudes of IDC remained above 40 cm H 2 O. There was no statistical difference between patients on anticholinergic monotherapy or bitherapy at follow-up. Conclusion: Anticholinergic treatment is not always satisfactory in terms of control of NDO and rarely allows full continence. INTRODUCTIONThe quality of life of patients presenting with spinal cord injury (SCI) is frequently impaired by lower urinary tract dysfunction. In supra-sacral SCI lesions, neurogenic overactive bladder (NOAB) is common, with symptoms including urgency, with or without urge incontinence, frequency and nocturia. 1 Patients with NOAB are often found to have neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO), an urodynamic observation characterised by involuntary detrusor contractions (IDCs) during the filling phase that is either spontaneous or provoked. 2 Amplitudes of IDC greater than 40 cm H 2 O pose a threat to the upper urinary tract. 3 Oral antimuscarinic agents have been widely used as first-line treatment for patients with NDO. However, they are ineffective in some patients and are often associated with bothering side effects such as dry mouth, constipation and blurred vision. 2,4 The clinical and urodynamic efficacy of anticholinergic agents in SCI patients has been evaluated in a limited number of studies. [5][6][7][8][9] They all showed a significant decrease in the number of leakages per day with improved quality of life. Urodynamic testing showed significant improvement in maximum bladder capacity (BCmax) and significant reduction in amplitudes of IDC. However, these were mainly short-term studies, using different evaluation criteria, with different drugs at flexible doses. Surprisingly, patients presenting with daily leakages and persistence of IDC (as high as 35...
Ejaculation is difficult to induce using VM in patients with CE and CM lesions, and requires high doses of midodrine. Sperm counts were generally low, and asthenospermia and necrospermia were found in the majority of specimens. Cryopreservation of sperm should be systematic in case of medically assisted procreation.
Study design: This is a retrospective study. Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine outcome predictors for urethral injection of botulinum toxin to treat detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (DSD) in patients with spinal cord injury. Methods: Botulinum toxin type A (100 Units Botox, Allergan) was injected into the external urethral sphincter using a transperineal approach under EMG guidance. Treatment was indicated if DSD was found on urodynamic testing with a post-void residual volume (PVR) above 100 ml. Urodynamic tests and cystourethrograms were performed at baseline. Dysuria (scale of 1-5) and PVR (48-h bladder diary) were evaluated at baseline and 1 month. The outcome was deemed excellent when PVR was equal to or o100 ml and 20%, and dysuria rated o3. Results: Seventy-two men with tetraplegia and 27 with paraplegia were included. There were significant reductions in PVR (from 227 to 97 ml and 63% to 27%) and dysuria (from 4.3 to 2.3). Excellent outcomes were found in 48 patients (48%), and the duration of effectiveness was 6.5 months. The need for catheterisation was decreased or eliminated in 18 patients. Vesicoureteral reflux disappeared in some patients. Poor outcome was significantly related to the presence of bladder neck dyssynergia and the absence of detrusor contraction in standard cystometry. Outcome was also related to the severity of DSD, with a strong correlation between PVR before and after injection (r = 0.58). Injections were repeated in 36 patients and yielded similar outcomes in most cases (89%). Conclusions: Detrusor contractions (odds ratio = 8.6) and normal bladder neck activity (odds ratio = 7.1) are strong predictors of excellent outcome.
Chondromyxoid fibroma of the scapula occurring in a 23 year old woman is of interest because of its unusual site and the extensive invasion of the soft tissues.
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