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Urodynamics and Bladder Outlet Obstruction

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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 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Urodynamics and Bladder Outlet Obstruction


1
Urodynamics and Bladder Outlet Obstruction
  • Hann-Chorng Kuo
  • Department of Urology
  • Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital

2
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

3
Benign prostatic enlargement
4
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

5
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

6
Bladder Filling Phase
  • Laplaces 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)

7
Rhythmic Detrusor Contractions after
Resiniferatoxin treatment
8
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

9
Initiation of VoidingThe Relationship of Q and
Pdet
10
Initiation of VoidingActive relaxation of
External sphincter
11
Initiation of VoidingPassive opening of urethral
wall
12
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

13
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)

14
Reduced Pdet at decreasing intravesical volume
15
Iso-volumetric Detrusor Contraction at Stop Test
16
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

17
Relationship of Pressure Flow
18
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

19
The Abrams-Griffiths Plot
20
The Schafer Nomogram
21
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

22
Decrease in Contractile Velocity in Bladder
Outlet Obstruction
23
Constrictive vs Compressive Pressure Flow Plots
24
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

25
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

26
Pressure Flow Plot for Diagnosis of Obstruction
27
Abrams Griffiths Number
  • AG number Pdet.Qmax 2 x Qmax
  • Obstruction
  • AGgt 40
  • Nonobstruction
  • AGlt20
  • Equivocal
  • 20ltAGlt40

28
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

29
Constrictive Obstruction in Female Urethral
Stricture
30
Constrictive Obstructionin Anterior Urethral
Valve
31
Compressive Obstructionin BPH Obstruction
32
Compressive Obstructionin Dysfunctional Voiding
33
Constrictive Obstruction in Urethral Stricture
34
Obstruction in Detrusor External Sphincter
Dyssynergia (DESD)
35
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

36
Post-incontinence surgeryBladder neck obstruction
37
Spastic Urethral SphincterCompressive Obstruction
38
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

39
Low Contractility Force in BPH Obstruction
40
BPH with Acute Urinary Retention
41
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

42
Post-prostatectomy Low Detrusor Contractility
43
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

44
Poor bladder compliance and low contractility
after prostatectomy
45
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

46
Detrusor overactivity and Pseudodyssynergia in CVA
47
DESD with incontinence Bilateral
vesicoureteral reflux
48
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

49
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

50
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

51
Poorly Relaxed Urethral Sphincter Hesitancy
Intermittency
52
Origins of Frequency Urgency Urge incontinence
Nocturia
  • Attributed to detrusor instability
  • Correlated with small voided amount and large
    residual urine
  • DI increases with age, decreased after
    prostatectomy,not correlated with detrusor
    pressure
  • Not absolutely caused by obstruction

53
Poor Stream Dribblingin Obstruction
  • Poor stream indicates either increased passive
    urethral resistance (BPO), decreased detrusor
    contractility force, or in combination with
    active urethral resistance (spastic urethral
    sphincter)
  • Terminal dribble may result from obstruction,
    evacuation of urine from urethra,or
    after-contraction

54
Low detrusor contractility and Poor stream in
woman
55
Post-micturition ContractionResidual urine
sensation
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