Urodynamic studies Flashcards

1
Q

Micturition pathway

A
  • Voiding under voluntary control mediated by pontine reticular formation centre in cerebellum
  • Storage/filling phase
    o Sensory receptors -> pelvic nerve -> S2-S4 -> pontine storage centre
    o Sympathetic descending fibres
  • Via hypogastric nerve and plexus (T10-L2)
  • Alpha adrenergic to bladder neck and urethra to increase resistance
  • Beta adrenergic to detrusor muscle to cause smooth muscle relaxation
    o Somatic descending fibres
  • Pudendal nerve innervates external sphincter to voluntarily increase tone
    o First urge to void at half bladder capacity
    o Suppression of detrusor contraction may be accompanied by voluntary pelvic floor contraction
  • Initiation phase
    o Relaxation of pelvic floor muscle
    o Inhibition of the pontine mictuition centre allows parasympathetic system to become activated
    o Parasympathetic fibres (S2-S4) via pelvic nerve, release acetylcholine which binds to M2 and M3 receptors causing detrusor muscle contraction and
    inhibition of intrinsic sphincter
  • Voiding phase
    o Rising intravesical and falling urethral pressure results in bladder emptying
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2
Q

Urodynamics

A
  • Pressure measurements
    o Pves – intravesical pressure
  • Measured with bladder pressure transducer
    o Pabd – abdominal pressure
  • Estimated with catheter in rectum
  • Not a ‘true’ pressure as not intra-abdominal
    o Pdet – detrusor pressure
  • = Pves – Pabd
  • Involuntary detrusor activity during filling diagnoses detrusor overactivity
  • Usually accompanied by feeling of urge
    o Pura – urethral pressure
    o Reference level at pubic symphysis
    o Pressure measurements recorded simultaneously over time
    o Pt should be asked to cough early in filling
  • Observe for increased Pabd and Pves without increase in Pdet to confirm correct placement
  • Filling measurements – patient sensations
    o Slow bladder (30-60mL/min) filling with normal saline
    o Pt reports first desire to void, strong desire and urgency
  • Cystometric capacity
    o Either record volume infused at urgency (ignores urine production during procedure) or add voided volume and residual volume
    o Higher than functional capacity
    o Cystometric capacity is reduced in detrusor overactivity and low bladder wall compliance
  • End-filling pressure
    o A measure of bladder compliance
    o Bladder compliance means the detrusor muscle remains relaxed over a wide volume
    o Low compliance means the intravesical pressure rises at low volumes
    o Causes include fibrosis of bladder wall, upper urinary tract disease
    o In this case there will be a high end-filling pressure
  • Detrusor leak point pressure
    o The Pdet at which overflow urinary incontinence occurs
    o Ie, the detrusor pressure where leakage occurs without a voluntary increase in abdominal pressure or detrusor contraction
    o High detrusor LPP is a feature in people with neurogenic bladder and places them at increased risk of upper urinary tract disease (essentially a measure of urinary retention!)
  • Abdominal leak point pressure
    o The Pabd required to drive urine across a closed urethral sphincter
    o May be assessed with cough or valsalva
    o Any measureable abdominal LPP suggests stress urinary incontinence
    o More suggestive of intrinsic sphincter deficiency
    o Urodynamic stress incontinence diagnosed when involuntary loss of urine occurs with raised abdominal pressure in the absence of detrusor contraction
  • Urethral opening pressure
    o The Pdet required to open urethra when voluntary micturition initiated
  • Maximal urethral closure pressure
    o The difference between the maximal urethral pressure and the bladderpressure
    o Measured by withdrawing a urethral pressure catheter along the length of the urethra
    o Low MUCP suggestive of intrinsic sphincter deficiency
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3
Q

Uroflowmetry

A
  • An assessment of voiding pattern
  • Patient voids into a pan that records either weight or volume
  • Measures volume voided over time to calculate flow in mL/s
  • Maximal flow increases with volume voided
    o Compare to nomograms for analysis
  • Assess for shape of graph
    o Should be smooth
    o Stop-start or low maximum flow suggestive of obstruction or poor detrusor activity (ie MS)
  • Some UDS allow simultaneous measurement of pressures during the void
    o Allows differentiation of voiding dysfunction due to bladder outlet obstruction (good detrusor contraction) vs poor detrusor function
    (generation of abdominal pressure to empty bladder
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4
Q

Basic Procedure

A
  • Free uroflow
  • Position patient
  • Determine post-void residual (using UD catheter)
  • Place rectal catheter
  • Fill bladder slowly and record patient sensations of urgency
  • Trial manoeuvres to provoke incontinence (Valsalva and cough) or detrusor
    overactivity (washing hands, running water)
  • Measure cystometric capacity and end-filling pressure
  • Uroflow with catheters in situ
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