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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of stroke are complex and diverse. Deficits experienced depend on the location of damage and vary in severity. Voiding problems resulting from a stroke include uninhibited neurogenic bladder, urgency and frequency, retention, urge incontinence, and overflow incontinence. Because a variety of causative and contributing factors are involved, comprehensive and ongoing evaluation is necessary. Although bladder dysfunction is common initially after stroke, evidence has shown that improvements in voiding occur after the first few weeks. Intermittent sterile catheterization, scheduled voiding, pelvic floor exercises, and relaxation techniques can be effective, especially if other stroke deficit considerations are incorporated into the management plan.
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PMID:Bladder dysfunction after stroke. 160 11

Urinary incontinence can occur poststroke owing to weakness or incoordination of sphincter muscles, impaired bladder sensation, or hyperreflexic, neurogenic bladder. Four male subjects who had urinary incontinence associated with a stroke that had occurred 8 months to 10 years earlier, and who averaged 1.6 to 7.5 accidental voidings per week, participated in an outpatient study with a 4-week scheduled-voiding baseline, 2 to 5 sessions of biofeedback-assisted bladder retraining, and 6- to 12-month follow-up. Training sessions included stepwise filling of the bladder and manometric feedback display of bladder pressure, abdominal pressure, and external anal sphincter pressure. Training procedures were designed to teach subjects to attend to bladder sensations, inhibit bladder contractions, and improve voluntary sphincter muscle control. All four subjects achieved and maintained continence regardless of substantial differences in subject characteristics, including laterality of stroke, degree of sensory impairment, and independence in daily activities.
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PMID:Biofeedback in treatment of urinary incontinence in stroke patients. 275 58

Neurogenic bladder is a common feature in many neurological disorders such as stroke, multiple sclerosis, paraplegia, Parkinson disease, peripheral neuropathy. Specific treatment is always necessary to improve quality of life and decrease renal potential risk. Urodynamic investigations (cystometry, pelvic floor electromyography) are very useful to determine physiopathologic mechanisms of bladder dysfunction.
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PMID:[Vesico-sphincter disorders of nervous origin]. 772 38

Neurologic disorders create important functional urinary tract abnormalities. Loss of bladder reflex inhibition and coordination due to neurologic disease or injury to higher centers may lead to morbidity such as recurrent urinary tract infection, hydronephrosis, urinary tract stones and loss of renal function. This paper discusses neurogenic bladder disease using a descriptive urodynamic format. The importance of detrusor hyperreflexia and internal and external sphincter dyssynergia are discussed in detail. Finally, a practical clinical management plan is discussed for patients with urologic dysfunction due to cerebrovascular accident, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, and peripheral neuropathy.
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PMID:Evaluation and management of the urologic consequences of neurologic disease. 908 42

Neurogenic bladder leading to urinary incontinence has been described in patients of stroke, dementia, Parkinson's disease, and some schizophrenia cases with cognitive impairment possibly due to impaired cortical inhibition of the urinary bladder. The underlying brain abnormalities for urinary incontinence are similar in such cases. We report here such a case of neurogenic bladder responding to treatment with clozapine. The possible mechanism of action and clinical implications are described.
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PMID:Clozapine for the treatment of neurogenic bladder. 1724 73

Benign prostatic hyperplasia, which is usually treated conservatively (except in the presence of complications) in non-neurological patients, needs to be managed even more cautiously in patients with neurogenic bladder. The treatment decision must include analysis of the previous voiding mode. The development of detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia in an elderly man with a neurological disease must raise the suspicion of prostatic obstruction. The difficulty of establishing a diagnosis of obstruction, that cannot always be confirmed by clinical tools, urodynamic assessment or the search for renal complications, may lead to temporary prostatic stenting as a diagnostic procedure. Certain situations are more specifically encountered in patients with neurogenic bladder: spinal cord injury patients with reflex voiding, patients with stroke and its sequelae, ageing men and diabetic patients.
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PMID:[Benign prostatic hyperplasia and neurourology]. 1762 85

The possible relationship between erectile dysfunction and the later occurrence of cardiovascular disease while biologically plausible has been evaluated in only a few studies. Our objective is to determine the relation between ED as defined by a single question on erectile rigidity and the later occurrence of myocardial infarction, stroke and sudden death in a population-based cohort study. In Krimpen aan den IJssel, a municipality near Rotterdam, all men aged 50-75 years, without cancer of the prostate or the bladder, without a history of radical prostectomy, neurogenic bladder disease, were invited to participate for a response rate of 50%. The answer to a single question on erectile rigidity included in the International Continence Society male sex questionnaire was used to define the severity of erectile dysfunction at baseline. Data on cardiovascular risk factors at baseline (age smoking, blood pressure, total- and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, diabetes) were used to calculate Framingham risk scores. During an average of 6.3 years of follow-up, cardiovascular end points including acute myocardial infarction, stroke and sudden death were determined. Of the 1248 men free of CVD at baseline, 258 (22.8%) had reduced erectile rigidity and 108 (8.7%) had severely reduced erectile rigidity. In 7945 person-years of follow-up, 58 cardiovascular events occurred. In multiple variable Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for age and CVD risk score, hazard ratio was 1.6 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.2-2.3) for reduced erectile rigidity and 2.6 (95% CI: 1.3-5.2) for severely reduced erectile rigidity. The population attributable risk fraction for reduced and severely reduced erectile rigidity was 11.7%. In this population-based study, a single question on erectile rigidity proved to be a predictor for the combined outcome of acute myocardial infarction, stroke and sudden death, independent of the risk factors used in the Framingham risk profile.
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PMID:Erectile dysfunction prospectively associated with cardiovascular disease in the Dutch general population: results from the Krimpen Study. 1772 4

There are a number of neurological conditions that cause bladder and bowel problems in the form of neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction. Both have a considerable impact on a person's quality of life. Nurses have an important role to play in supporting patients when considering the options available to manage their neurogenic bladder and bowel problems. This article is the first of a series of three. Part 1 outlines the physiology of micturition and defecation. It discusses the pathophysiological changes in neurogenic bladder and bowel in spinal cord injury, spina bifida, multiple sclerosis, stroke and acquired brain injury, cerebral palsy, Parkinson's disease and diabetes mellitus. The psychosocial impact of this neurogenic dysfunction is addressed. Part 2 discusses the physical and psychosocial issues related to the management of neurogenic bowel dysfunction, and part 3 goes on to discuss the physical and psychosocial management of neurogenic bladder dysfunction.
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PMID:Neurogenic continence. Part 1: pathophysiology and quality of ilfe. 1885 46

Neurogenic bladder is related to various types of neurogenic disease and injury, including cerebrovascular accident, brain tumor, spinal cord injury, and Parkinson's disease. The results of urodynamic study show different types of detrusor and sphincter function. According to these urodynamic results, the physician decides on a treatment plan, such as anticholinergics or alpha-blockers. In the development of a new medication, it is necessary to test the medication's efficacy and toxicity by using a laboratory animal. The proper laboratory animal should have several characteristics. These are biological similarity to humans, a short generation period, and an environment that is easy to control. We describe the development of laboratory animals for the study of neurogenic bladder by decerebration, stroke, and spinal cord injury.
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PMID:Experimental animal models of neurogenic bladder dysfunction. 2112 Jan 69

Neurogenic bladder (NGB) and neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) manifesting in urinary incontinence (UI) can present substantial treatment challenges to clinicians managing patients with underlying neurologic disorders such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, spinal cord injury, spina bifida, and stroke. Although the clinical disease burden alone is difficult for patients and those managing their disorders, the significant negative impact that NGB/NDO and UI can have on health-related quality of life and the economic costs surrounding these disorders can be devastating for patients already burdened with neurologic disorders. Careful clinician assessment of these quality-of-life issues and the economic impact of NGB/NDO with UI is needed to appropriately assess the burden these disorders place on patients and their management and to assist clinicians to design the most clinically, socially, and economically effective individualized management plans to optimize patient outcomes.
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PMID:Managed care aspects of managing neurogenic bladder/neurogenic detrusor overactivity. 2449 42


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