Voiding Efficiency (voiding + efficiency)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Short-term effect of a single levodopa dose on micturition disturbance in Parkinson's disease patients with the wearing-off phenomenon

MOVEMENT DISORDERS, Issue 5 2003
Tomoyuki Uchiyama MD
Abstract We investigated the short-term effects of a single dose of levodopa (L -dopa) on micturition function in PD patients with wearing-off phenomenon. Eighteen PD patients who had median Hoehn and Yahr scores of 5 during the off phase and 3 during the on phase were recruited. We carried out urodynamic studies before and about 1 hour after the patients had taken 100 mg of L -dopa with dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor (DCI). After taking the L -dopa/DCI, urinary urgency and urge incontinence aggravated, whereas voiding difficulty was alleviated in all 12 patients. When compared to the baseline assessment, urodynamic study results after taking 100 mg of L -dopa/DCI showed aggravated detrusor hyperreflexia; decreased maximum bladder capacity (P = 0.006); an increased maximum Watts Factor value (P = 0.001), reflecting the detrusor power on voiding; an increased Abrams-Griffiths number (P = 0.042), reflecting urethral obstruction on voiding; decreased residual urine volume (P = 0.025); and increased static urethral closure pressure (P = 0.012). One hundred milligrams of L -dopa/DCI worsened detrusor hyperreflexia, producing worsened urinary urgency and urge incontinence during the storage (bladder-filling) phase. It also increased detrusor contractility much more than it did urethral obstruction in the voiding phase, producing overall lessening of voiding difficulty and improving voiding efficiency in our PD patients with the wearing-off phenomenon. © 2003 Movement Disorder Society [source]


Urodynamic findings in female diabetic patients with and without overactive bladder symptoms,,

NEUROUROLOGY AND URODYNAMICS, Issue 3 2010
Chen-Hsun Ho
Abstract Aims The purpose was to analyze urodynamic findings in female diabetic patients with OAB symptoms. Methods Data from 94 female diabetic patients who underwent urodynamic studies in evaluation of various LUTS were retrospectively reviewed. Urodynamic findings, demographic data, and clinical symptoms were compared between patients with and without OAB. Results Among the 94 subjects analyzed, 34 (36.2%) were diagnosed as OAB. Demographic data were similar between the patients with and without OAB. In the OAB group, patients had significantly higher storage symptom scores and marginally higher voiding symptom scores. On cystometry, the OAB group had a higher percentage of increased bladder sensation (41.2% vs 11.7%, P,=,0.001) and detrusor overactivity (29.4% vs 10.0%, P,=,0.023). The OAB group had lower peak flow rate (16.2,±,5.9 vs 19.3,±,6.3 ml/s, P,=,0.023), greater PVR volume (60.3,±,29.4 vs 45.0,±,25.1 ml, P,=,0.009), and lower bladder voiding efficiency (BVE, 75.2,±,2.8 vs 81.5,±,2.9%, P,<,0.001). On pressure-flow studies, the OAB group had a higher percentage of BOO (26.5% vs 6.7%, P,=,0.008). Conclusions Our study shows that the most frequent urodynamic finding of OAB in female diabetic patients is increased bladder sensation, followed by detrusor overactivity. Compared to those without OAB, female diabetic patients with OAB are more likely to have impaired voiding function, characterized by lower peak flow rate, greater PVR volume, lower BVE, and a higher percentage of BOO. In these patients, BOO not only causes voiding difficulty but may also contribute to the development of OAB. Neurourol. Urodynam. 29:424,427, 2010. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Voiding reflex in chronic spinal cord injured cats induced by stimulating and blocking pudendal nerves,,

NEUROUROLOGY AND URODYNAMICS, Issue 6 2007
Changfeng Tai
Abstract Aims To induce efficient voiding in chronic spinal cord injured (SCI) cats. Methods Voiding reflexes induced by bladder distension or by electrical stimulation and block of pudendal nerves were investigated in chronic SCI cats under ,-chloralose anesthesia. Results The voiding efficiency in chronic SCI cats induced by bladder distension was very poor compared to that in spinal intact cats (7.3,±,0.9% vs. 93.6,±,2.0%, P,<,0.05). In chronic SCI cats continuous stimulation of the pudendal nerve on one side at 20 Hz induced large amplitude bladder contractions, but failed to induce voiding. However, continuous pudendal nerve stimulation (20 Hz) combined with high-frequency (10 kHz) distal blockade of the ipsilateral pudendal nerve elicited efficient (73.2,±,10.7%) voiding. Blocking the pudendal nerves bilaterally produced voiding efficiency (82.5,±,4.8%) comparable to the efficiency during voidings induced by bladder distension in spinal intact cats, indicating that the external urethral sphincter (EUS) contraction was caused not only by direct activation of the pudendal efferent fibers, but also by spinal reflex activation of the EUS through the contralateral pudendal nerve. The maximal bladder pressure and average flow rate induced by stimulation and bilateral pudendal nerve block in chronic SCI cats were also comparable to those in spinal intact cats. Conclusions This study shows that after the spinal cord is chronically isolated from the pontine micturition center, bladder distension evokes a transient, inefficient voiding reflex, whereas stimulation of somatic afferent fibers evokes a strong, long duration, spinal bladder reflex that elicits efficient voiding when combined with blockade of somatic efferent fibers in the pudendal nerves. Neurourol. Urodynam. 26:879,886, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Type 4 phosphodiesterase inhibitor suppresses experimental bladder inflammation

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 10 2008
Takeya Kitta
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of orally administered YM976, a specific inhibitor of type 4 phosphodiesterase (PDE4), on bladder activity in a rat model with hydrochloric acid (HCl)-induced cystitis (IC), hypothesizing that a PDE4 inhibitor might suppress bladder overactivity and bladder pain responses in bladder-hypersensitive disorders such as IC. MATERIALS AND METHODS Wistar rats with HCl-induced IC were treated with YM976 or vehicle and their voiding observed and assessed by cystometry. The severity of bladder inflammation (BI) was quantified using the BI index (BII), which comprises three factors (oedema, leukocyte infiltration and haemorrhage). Nociceptive neural activity was also examined using an immunohistochemical study of spinal c-fos expression. RESULTS YM976 significantly reduced the number of voids, and the volume per void was significantly higher than in control (vehicle) group. Cystometry showed a significant increase in bladder capacity, voided volume and voiding efficiency, and a decrease in the amplitude of voiding pressure in rats treated with YM976. All BII scores were significantly lower in the YM976 than in the control group. c-fos expression in the spine was less in the YM976 than in the control group. CONCLUSIONS Oral administration of YM976 significantly improved the voiding behaviour and histological damage in rats with IC induced by HCl. These results indicate that PDE4 inhibitor might be effective in relieving bladder symptoms with IC. [source]