Urinary Incontinence Flashcards

1
Q

Primary mechanism of maintaining urinary continence at rest?

A

Continuous contraction of the internal sphincter (urethrovesical junction):
Intraurethral pressure > intravesical pressure.

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2
Q

Three mechanisms of maintaining urinary continence?

A

Internal and external sphincters and estrogen-sensitive mucosal coaptation from urethral vasculature.

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3
Q

Sympathetic innervation of the bladder (and location) and function?

A

Hypogastric nerve T10-L2. Constricts bladder neck and internal sphincter.

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4
Q

Parasympathetic innervation of the bladder (and location) and function?

A

Pelvic nerve S2-4. Allows mictruition

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5
Q

Somatic innervation of the bladder and function?

A

Pudendal nerve. Constricts external sphincter and pelvic floor.

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6
Q

What initiates voluntary voiding?

A

Stretch receptors in the bladder send signal to CNS which inhibit sympathetic and somatic signals then activates the parasympathetics.

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7
Q

Four types of urinary incontinence?

A

Stress incontinence, detrusor overactivity, mixed incontinence, and overflow incontinence.

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8
Q

Purpose of cotton swab test?

A

Diagnose hypermobile urethra due to stress incontinence.

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9
Q

Two specific urodynamic tests?

A

Cystometrogram (pressure sensors to assess detrusor reflex after bladder filling) and uroflowmetry (good at determining if outflow obstruction)

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10
Q

Pathogenesis of stress incontinence?

Three most common risk factors?

A

Increasing abdominal pressure, in combination with a hypermobile urethra from pelvic relaxation, results in intravesical pressure > intraurethral pressure.

Pelvic relaxation, chronic increased intra-abdominal pressures, and menopause.

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11
Q

Does a patient with stress incontinence have normal Detrusor contractions?
Cystometrogram?
Cotton Swab test?
Bladder Capacity and sensation?

A

Yes.
Yes.
No - hypermobile urethra (swab moves >30*)
Yes.

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12
Q

Treatment for stress incontinence?

A

You can try Kegels and estrogens and pessaries…but you’re gonna need surgery to resuspend the hypermobile urethra.

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13
Q

Pathogenesis of detrusor overactivity?
Cause?
Most common symptoms?

A

Urge incontinence is caused by involuntary and uninhibited detrusor contractions during the filling phase.
Idiopathic - UTI, cancer, device, foreign body, stroke, alzheimer’s, etc.
Urgency, Frequency, nocturia

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14
Q

Treatment of detrusor overactivity?

A

Bladder training and Kegels etc…
Anticholinergics (oxybutynin), smooth msucle relaxants (tolterodine).

NOT TREATED SURGICALLY

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15
Q

Treatment of mixed incontinence? MOA?

A

Tofranil (Tricylic antidepressant) - anticholinergic and alpha adrenergic activity

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16
Q

Bladder contractions are mediated by the release of what chemical?
Bladder relaxation is mediated by the release of what chemical?

A

Acetylcholine

Norepinephrine

17
Q

Two mechanisms of overflow incontinence?
Causes?
Which drug would you presribe for mixed incontinence, but would make overflow incontinence far worse?

A

Detrusor insufficiency (bladder hypotonia) and detrusor areflexia (bladder acontractility) - results in weak contractions and an overdistended bladder.

Post-operative urinary retention, diabetes, spinal cord injuries, lower motor neuron disease.

Tofranil (alpha adrenergic agonist and anticholinergic)

18
Q

How does overflow incontinence present?

Treatment (4 methods)?

A

Constant urinary dribbling.
Reduce urethral closing pressure (resistance) - prazosin (alpha blocker)
Reduce bladder outlet resistance - Diazepam (muscle relaxant)
Increase contractility - Bethanechol (cholinergic)
Release bladder volume - catheterization

19
Q

Most common cause of bypass incontinence in developing countries?
In developed countries?

A

Urinary fistula from obstetric trauma.

Urinary fistula from pelvic radiation/surgery (50% come from hysterectomies).

20
Q

Presentation of urinary fistula in the US?
Diagnostic tests?
Treatment?
Reasons to delay treatment?

A

Woman 5-14 days after surgery presents with painless continuous loss of urine after a hysterectomy or pelvic radiation.

Methylene blue dye and IV indigo carmine to determinel location of the fistula - or voiding cystourethrogram.

Immediate surgical closure.
Delay surgery 3-6 months if post-surgical fistula to allow inflammation to decrease.

21
Q

What is functional incontinence?

A

Urinary loss due to physical/mental inability to attend to voiding cues ie. delirium/dementia/meds - treat the root cause.