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Urodynamics and Bladder Outlet Obstruction. Hann-Chorng Kuo Department of Urology Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital. Bladder Outlet Obstruction. BOO occurs in both women and men The most frequent clinical problem in aging males
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Urodynamics and Bladder Outlet Obstruction Hann-Chorng Kuo Department of Urology Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital
Bladder Outlet Obstruction • BOO occurs in both women and men • The most frequent clinical problem in aging males • BOO can be progressive, results in bladder irritation, compensation,and decompensation
Storage and Empty Symptoms related to BOO • Bladder dysfunction or outlet obstruction • Increased frequency day or night • Urgency or urge incontinence • Hesitancy and reduced urinary stream • Intermittency and postvoid dribbling • Urinary retention • Upper tract dilatation, bladder stone, uremia • Urinary tract infection
Detrusor Changes after BOO • Irritative stage: detrusor hypertrophy, uninhibited detrusor contractions • Compensation stage: Detrusor hypertrophy, trabeculation, pseudodiverticulum, increased urethral resistance, increased residual urine, stenosis at UVJ, bilateral hydroureter and hydronephrosis • Decompensation stage: overdistended, over-flow incontinence, renal function is decreased
Bladder Filling Phase • Laplace’s law: T = Pdet R (Tension= detrusor pressure x radius of bladder) • Low frequency micromotion of detrusor exist in bladder • Regional spontaneous contractions cause only slight changes of stress in bladder wall • Bladder filling at 0.5-1ml/min (F.S. 300ml) • Rapid stretch (i.e. diuresis) can cause a sensation of fullness at a small volume (F.S. 150ml)
Rhythmic Detrusor Contractions after Resiniferatoxin treatment
Voiding Phase • Voiding process starts from relaxation of external sphincter followed by detrusor contraction • At the opening pressure, flow starts • Urethral compliance allows increased flow through increasing Pdet • Urethral obstruction reduces compliance and reduces flow increase
Initiation of VoidingActive relaxation of External sphincter
Urethral Compliance • Not constant during voiding • Passive viscoelastic property of urethral wall • Active properties of urethral smooth muscle and periurethral external sphincter • Pdet= Puo + Q2 / c c= coefficient of urethral compliance
Bladder Pressure • Intravesical pressure (Pves) = intra-abdominal pressure (Pabd) + detrusor pressure (Pdet) • Patients may use mainly Pabd to void • Pdet depends on intravesical volume • Pdet decreases at decreasing volume during voiding phase • Isovolumetric contraction (Piso) occurs when flow is suddenly interrupted (stop test)
Pressure Flow Relations • I: Isometric contraction of detrusor • II: Detrusor pressure further increases activation, flow continues to increase until maximal activation of detrusor reaches • III: Decrease in bladder volume and decreasing pressure and flow
Passive Urethral Resistance Relation • Schafer proposed PURR, a straight line is drawn through two values read from recording, the pressure at maximal flow rate and the lowest pressure at which actual flow occurs (Pmuo) • Griffiths used value of opening pressure (URA) for passive urethral resistance
The Contraction Power • WF is the power developed by detrusor contraction per unit of area • During voiding, WF initially increases and reaches a plateau value, then decreases • Classification of obstruction by obstructive grades and contractility
Decrease in Contractile Velocity in Bladder Outlet Obstruction
Obstruction • Urethral resistance increases & flow decreases • Residual urine increases as detrusor decompensation occurs • Obstructive symptoms are unreliable • Bladder trabeculaion, thickened, impaired voiding may be aging, neuropathic, musculogenic, increased urethral resistance or in combination • Both filling and empty phases should be investigated for voiding dysfunction
Confirmation of Increased Urethral Resistance • Measuring detrusor pressure at peak flow • Using A-G number by ICS nomogram • Urethral resistance R = Pdet / Qmax 2 • Catheter of different size may interfere urethral resistance • Bladder dysfunction and increased urethral resistance may coexist
Abrams Griffiths Number • AG number = Pdet.Qmax – 2 x Qmax • Obstruction AG> 40 • Nonobstruction AG<20 • Equivocal 20<AG<40
Constrictive Obstructionin Urethral Stricture • A normal or high opening pressure and a constant flow rate although Pdet increases during voiding • Bladder trabeculation and large residual urine may develop
Obstruction in Detrusor External Sphincter Dyssynergia (DESD)
Bladder Outlet Obstruction in Women • No definite criteria for BOO in women • A sustained voiding pressure and a low flow rate, moderate residual urine, and radiological evidence of infravesical narrowing during voiding • Primary bladder neck obstruction, urethral stricture, dysfunctional voiding, cystocele, post-incontinence stricture are most common
Decompensation of Detrusor • Acute urinary retention develops when intra-urethral resistance increases combined with an increase of sympathetic tone due to bladder distension • Relief of bladder distention may reverse acute retention with the aid of alpha-blocker • Decrease in detrusor tone may occur during acute retention
Decompensation of Detrusor • Contractility is reduced as the length of smooth muscle is beyond an optimal amount • Increased upper tract pressure as intravesical pressure is increased • Reverse of detrusor contractility takes time depending on the duration of detrusor decompensation
Chronic urinary retention • No detrusor contractility • Patients use abdominal straining to void • Overflow incontinence • Small voiding amount • Resistance at ureterovesical junction is increased • Upper tract dilatation and azotemia
Poor bladder compliance and low contractility after prostatectomy
Detrusor Overactivity • No correlation of detrusor instability with severity of infravesical obstruction • Aging process • Poor cortical perfusion • Changes of vasoactive intestinal polypeptides or neurotransmitters • Occult neurological lesion
Impaired Detrusor Contractility • Decrease in either contraction force or velocity in about 40% • Wide spread degeneration of muscle cells • Degeneration of axons • Reduction of intermediate cell junctions • Collagenosis between individual muscle cells with myohypertrophy
Partial Bladder Outlet Obstruction and Energetics • Decrease in glucose oxidation by 30% • Decrease in creatine phosphate in rabbit • Less creatine phosphate and ATP in obstructed bladder, which returned to normal after relief of obstruction • Acute initial mitochondrial damage produced by obstruction in rabbit
Origins of Hesitancy • Time delay between start of voiding and effective flow • Increased initial opening pressure related to compressive obstruction • Possibly due to delay in relaxation of external sphincter • No correlation with detrusor contractility