Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eighteen patients with dural arteriovenous fistulas or intradural arteriovenous malformations underwent clinical and neurophysiological examination. Bladder disturbances, pain, sensory abnormalities and involvement of both upper and lower motor neurons were commonly observed. Abnormal findings were obtained both in electromyography (11/18) and somatosensory evoked potentials (16/18). The motor evoked potentials were abnormal in all but one patient and showed a prolonged central (n = 14) or peripheral motor conduction time (n = 6). In three cases both values were prolonged. The results of nerve conduction studies in the patients with prolonged peripheral motor conduction times were normal. These neurophysiological findings may indicate root involvement in some patients, probably due to venous congestion and consequent hypoxia, as there were no signs of root compression on neuroradiological evaluation in any of these six patients. Motor evoked potentials may provide an additional clue to the diagnosis, although patients with spinal stenosis or motor neuron disease may present with similar findings.
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PMID:Spinal arteriovenous malformations: clinical and neurophysiological findings. 886 80

The results of a retrospective study of 24 adult patients with occult dysraphism are described. There were 15 males and 9 females, with an average age of 31.1 years. Specific circumstances precipitated symptomatic onset in 67% of patients. Pain, often referred to the anorectal region, was the most common presenting symptom. Bladder and bowel dysfunction were also common findings. The most common tethering lesions were intradural lipoma and a short thickened filum terminale. Myelography revealed the diagnosis of tethered conus in most cases, but the addition of CT and MRI images provided valuable structural details. The surgical outcome was gratifying in relation to pain and sensory-motor deficits but disappointing in the resolution of sphincter disorders. Our conclusion is that symptoms and/or signs of TCS with onset in adult life are not invariably irreversible.
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PMID:Occult dysraphism in adulthood. A series of 24 cases. 916 30

Electromotive drug administration (EMDA) involves the active transport of ionized drugs such as lidocaine by the application of an electric current. Twenty-one female subjects with interstitial cystitis were treated with EMDA of lidocaine and dexamethasone, followed by cystodistension. The procedure was convenient and well tolerated, with hospital attendance for 1 hour. Bladder anesthesia was excellent, with cystodistension from a discomfort level of 200 ml to a mean volume of 600 ml. Eighty-five percent had a good response (reduction in frequency and in pain score by 3 or more) at 2 weeks, with 63% still responding at 2 months. An excellent response (pain score of 0) was present in 25% of patients reviewed at 6 months. These results are comparable to the response following cystodistension under general anesthesia. There is a need for a randomized blinded comparison of lidocaine with and without EMDA. If proven to be of pharmacological efficacy, EMDA would have many applications in facilitating procedures previously requiring general anesthesia.
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PMID:Electromotive drug administration of lidocaine and dexamethasone followed by cystodistension in women with interstitial cystitis. 944 86

Interstitial cystitis (IC) is a sterile bladder condition occurring primarily in females. It is characterized by frequency, nocturia, and suprapubic pain. IC symptoms are exacerbated during ovulation and under stress, thus implicating neurohormonal processes. The most prevalent theories to explain the pathophysiology of IC appear to be altered bladder lining and increased number of activated bladder mast cells. A defective bladder glycosaminoglycan (GAG) layer could allow penetration of allergic triggers, as well as chemicals, food preservatives, drugs, toxins, and adherent bacteria, all of which can activate bladder mast cells. Vasoactive, nociceptive, and proinflammatory molecules released can lead to immune cell infiltration and can sensitize neurons to secrete neurotransmitters or neuropeptides that can further activate mast cells. Mast cell-derived proteases can directly cause tissue damage, and it is noteworthy that urine tryptase is elevated in IC. Bladder mast cells are located close to neuronal processes, which are increased in IC, and they can be activated in situ by acetylcholine (ACh) and substance P (SP). Such activation is augmented by estradiol, which acquires significance in view of the fact that human bladder mast cells express estrogen receptors, but few progesterone receptors, which may explain the worsening of IC symptoms during ovulation. Finally, acute psychological stress in rats leads to mast cell activation that can be reduced by depletion of SP or neutralization of peripheral immune corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH). These findings suggest that IC could be a syndrome with neural, immune, and endocrine components, in which activated mast cells play a central role.
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PMID:Interstitial cystitis: a neuroimmunoendocrine disorder. 962 89

Total urinary incontinence is a difficult problem faced by the urologist. Several techniques to increase ureteral resistance have been described. The majority of them rely on intermittent catheterization for bladder emptying, especially in neurogenic incontinence. We have developed a new procedure in which a bladder flap is used to create a neourethra. This urethral extension acts as a flap valve to provide continence. Bladder emptying is accomplished by clean intermittent catheterization. Urethral lengthening with an anterior bladder-wall flap was performed in 18 patients aged a mean of 8.9 years who had neurogenic incontinence (14) or exstrophy (4). Patients with previous bladder interventions received a lateralized anterior flap. Bladder augmentation was performed in 14 of the 18 patients [detubularized ileum (11), detubularized colon (3)]. The average follow-up period is currently 29.3 months. Continence was achieved in 13 of the 18 patients (72%). Complications included urethrovesical fistulae, which developed in two patients. Two patients could not perform catheterization due to pain but had no obstruction to passage of catheter (exstrophy). Ureteral lengthening with an anterior bladder-wall flap is a useful alternative for the surgical treatment of urinary incontinence. This technique achieves a good continence rate and presents few problems with catheterization.
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PMID:Modifications of and extended indications for the Pippi Salle procedure. 977 28

Our objective was to determine if urinary bladder distention modifies the sensitivity of the baroreceptor-heart rate reflex in hypertensive and control subjects. The baroreceptor-heart rate reflex sensitivity was measured in 15 male patients (mean age 37+/-8 years) with mild untreated hypertension (mean 163+/-8/ 95+/-12 mmHg) and 17 age- and sex-matched control subjects before and after urinary bladder distention. Bladder filling was performed infusing saline heated to 37 degrees C via a urinary catheter; the volume infused in each patient corresponded to that which caused the urge to void without reaching the pain threshold. The baroreceptor-heart rate reflex sensitivity was determined correlating the variations of the systolic pressure and of the peak blood flow velocity in the common carotid artery with the variations of the ECG RR' interval of the following heart beat, both during spontaneous and phenylephrine-induced fluctuations of the haemodynamic variables. After bladder distention the diastolic pressure of the hypertensive subjects increased significantly (95+/-12 vs. 100+/-12 mmHg: P < 0.02), whereas the heart rate decreased (RR= 873+/-70 vs. 926+/-80 ms; P < 0.005). These parameters were unchanged in the normotensive subjects (84+/-9 vs. 83+/-8 mmHg and 914+/-158 vs. 913+/-140 ms, respectively). The baroreceptor-heart rate reflex sensitivity, measured on the basis of spontaneous pressure and carotid blood flow velocity fluctuations in relationship to RR changes, decreased in the normotensive subjects after bladder distention (10.7+/-4.6 vs. 9.4+/-2.7 ms/mmHg; P < 0.05 and 423+/-99 vs. 356+/-102 ms/kHz; P < 0.01, respectively), whereas it increased in the hypertensive patients (6.9 +/- 3.6 vs. 8.3 +/- 2.8 ms/mmHg; P < 0.03, and 332 +/- 86 vs. 381+/-97 ms/kHz; P < 0.03 respectively). After bladder distention and phenylephrine administration the baroreceptor-heart rate reflex sensitivity, measured by the correlation between systolic pressure and RR interval, increased only in the hypertensive group (10.2+/-5.4 vs. 15.2+/-7.7 ms/mmHg; P < 0.005). In conclusion urinary bladder distention provokes in hypertensives but not normotensive controls a brisk parasympathetic response of the component of the baroreceptor-heart rate reflex which controls heart rate.
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PMID:Baroreceptor-heart rate reflex sensitivity enhancement after urinary bladder distention in essential hypertensives. 1042 98

The treatment of stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is one of more controversial aspects of pelvic floor surgery. The indications for the surgical approach are related to the international classification as: Type 1 and Type 2 (Anatomical Incontinence), and Type 3 urinary incontinence (Intrinsic Sphincteric Dysfunction). The procedure of choice for Type 1 and Type 2 is Bladder Neck Suspension (BNS) that create a strong hammock against which the urethra can be compressed with sudden changes of abdominal pressure. Type 3 has to be treated by coaptation or compression of the deficient sphinteric unit (slings or injections). The mean cure rate after Marshall-Marchetti-Krantz is 77%, that of the Burch is 81%, and that of the Needle Suspension is 79%. Laparoscopy, Bone Anchors BNS and Tension-Free Vaginal Tape represent a promising option to the traditional techniques. The contribution of minimal invasive surgery consisting in: short recovery or possibility of day surgery, reduced trauma and pain, and success rate similar to the conventional techniques, is changing the SUI treatment.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of stress urinary incontinence. 1042 24

Objective: To assess the long-term genitourinary and gastrointestinal complaints following presacral neurectomy.Design: A prospective postoperative follow-up of patients who underwent laparoscopic presacral neurectomy and treatment of endometriosis.Materials and Methods: The mean follow-up of the 67 women (mean age 27.5 years, range 16-58 years) was an average of 36.8 months with a range of 6-69 years. Main outcome variables include diarrhea, constipation, bladder and urinary complaints, vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, and orgasm. The degree of pain and dysmenorrhea after surgery was also elevated.Results: Diarrhea was reported to have improved after surgery in 39.1% of the patients and none reported any worsening. Constipation improved in 28.6% and worsened in 12.5%. Only one patient suffered from debilitating constipation. Bladder and urinary problems were improved on 25.0% and worsened in 19.2%. A similar proportion of women (19.6%) reported improvement and worsening vaginal dryness. Pain during intercourse improved in 58.9% and worsened in 8.9%. The ability to achieve orgasm improved in 21.6% and worsened in 2.7%. Postoperatively, pain was improved by 80-100% in 46.6% of the women, by 50-80% in 36.5%, by less than 50% in 6.4%, and did not improve in 9.5%. Dysmenorrhea was improved by 80-100% in 35.2% of the women, by 50-80% in 38.8%, by less than 50% in 14.9%, and did not improve in 11.1%. Twelve of 16 patients trying to become pregnant were successful following surgery, two with the aid of in vitro fertilization.Conclusion: After laparoscopic presacral neurectomy, constipation and bladder and urinary problems were reported to have worsened in only a minority of patients. However, diarrhea and dyspareunia improved in a large proportion of patients. Since pelvic pain was relieved by more than 50% in 83.1%, the procedure seems to be associated with an acceptable rate of long-term side effects.
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PMID:Are the long-term adverse effects of laparoscopic presacral neurectomy for the management of central pain associated with endometriosis acceptable? 1083 74

OBJECTIVES: To study the safety and efficacy of intravesically administered capsaicin, a C-fiber afferent neurotoxin, in patients with interstitial cystitis (IC). METHODS: A pilot study of intravesical capsaicin therapy was performed on 5 female patients diagnosed with IC using NIDDK criteria. Patients were evaluated with cystoscopy and CMG on initial presentation. Bladder capacity, urinary histamine, PGE2 and substance P were measured before and after treatment. A symptom score, visual analogue pain score and frequency/nocturia charts were completed before treatment and weekly thereafter by each patient. Topical anesthesia (30 mls of 0.5% bupivacaine) was instilled intravesically for 30 minutes prior to each treatment with capsaicin. The initial instillation consisted of vehicle (1% ethanol in normal saline) and subsequent weekly instillations of capsaicin in increasing concentrations (10, 50, 100, and 250 uM solutions in 1% ethanol) were given as tolerated by the patient. RESULTS: Four out of 5 of the patients experienced subjective improvement in both symptom and pain score. Bladder capacity improved in 1 patient and symptoms of frequency and nocturia improved in 2 patients. Urinary histamine and PGE2 revealed no trend between before and after treatment; however, 3 out of 5 of the patients did have a trend to decreased substance P. No complications were noted during the course of this study. CONCLUSIONS: Intravesical capsaicin is a safe and promising treatment for interstitial cystitis. A potential mechanism of action is desensitization of bladder C-fiber afferents which presumably initiate painful sensations in IC patients. Low dose intravesical capsaicin therapy represents a potential treatment option for interstitial cystitis.
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PMID:Intravesical capsaicin for the treatment of interstitial cystitis: a pilot study. 1117 98

The purpose of this study was to investigate associations between bladder biopsy features and urinary symptoms for patients enrolled in the Interstitial Cystitis Database (ICDB) Study. Bladder biopsies were obtained during baseline screening in the ICDB Study and were evaluated for histopathologic features. Multivariable models for nighttime voiding frequency, urinary urgency, and pain were developed, incorporating biopsy features from the most diseased area of the bladder as predictors, adjusting for significant clinical factors, and clinical center variation. Among 204 interstitial cystitis (IC) patients providing biopsy specimens, cystoscopic pathology findings were not statistically associated (P >0.1) with primary IC symptoms, although the presence of Hunner's ulcer (n = 12) was suggestive of increased urinary frequency. Within a multivariable predictive model for nighttime voiding frequency, adjusting for age and minimum volume per void, 4 pathology features were noted: (1) mast cell count in lamina propria on tryptase stain; (2) complete loss of urothelium; (3) granulation tissue in lamina propria; and (4) vascular density in lamina propria on factor VIII (F8) stain were statistically significant (P <0.01). Similarly, in a multivariable model for urinary urgency, minimum volume, and percentage of submucosal granulation tissue remained statistically significant (P <0.01). Finally, the percentage of mucosa denuded of urothelium and the percentage of submucosal hemorrhage remained highly associated (P <0.01) with pain in a multivariable predictive model. The fact that the presence or severity of glomerulations was not selected for any of these predictive models suggests that cystoscopic findings of glomerulations are not predictive of IC symptoms. Furthermore, these results suggest an important role for certain pathologic features in the predictive modeling of IC symptoms.
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PMID:Biopsy features are associated with primary symptoms in interstitial cystitis: results from the interstitial cystitis database study. 1137 53


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