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Query: UMLS:C0677481 (
urinary frequency
)
1,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Interstitial cystitis is a chronic, heterogeneous syndrome that is characterized by the classic symptoms of
bladder pain
, nycturia, and
pollakiuria
. Population studies have shown an increase in prevalence and incidence. Different hypotheses exist about the etiology and pathogenesis. Epithelial dysfunction and neuro-urothelial interaction are the most frequently used causal models. Utilization of the official diagnosis criteria of the NIDDK (National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Disease) should be flexible and individual in order not to overlook early forms of IC. Since there is no pathognomonic marker, diagnosis of IC is a combination of typical patient history and exclusion of differential diagnoses. Cystoscopy and biopsies are not specific; however, they can provide useful information on extent and aid in treatment choice. The effectiveness of conservative therapy has been increased by using electromotive drug administration (EMDA) in instillation therapy.
...
PMID:[Interstitial cystitis. Current aspects of diagnosis and therapy]. 1532 57
A case is a 62 years old woman who consulted her family physicion with
pollakiuria
and sharp pain at the time of urinary bladder distention. Since anti-H1-antagonist but not antibiotics was partially effective against the symptoms and some specific food ingestion appeared to increase the
bladder pain
, she was referred to our hospital. Treatment with spulatast tosilate and elimination of food products that revealed the presence of specific IgE antibodies and positive skin reactiont resulted favorable clinical response. Cystoscopic examination showed reduction in bladder capacity, mucosal injection and vascularization, besides pinpoint submucosal hemorrage and linear ulcer by hydrodistension. The diagnosis of interstitial cystitis was established by those evidences and histological findings. The patient got apparent remission after the bladder hydrodistension and is now in steady state with an addition of suplatast tosilate, a Th2 cytokine inhibitor, on the treatment mentioned above. Interstitial cystitis is a very rare disease which is characterized by cystitis-symptoms with normal urinary finding and non-effectiveness of antibiotics. The pathogenesis of the disease is unclear but considered as allergic inflammation. We report a case of interstitial cystitis accompanied by food allergy.
...
PMID:[Case of interstitial cystitis accompanied by food allergy]. 1622 64
Interstitial cystitis (IC) is a chronic symptom-complex characterized by pathological sensation of the bladder (i.e.
bladder pain
in addition to augmented sensory signals such as
urinary frequency
and urgency) without evidence of bacterial cystitis or other identifiable lower urinary tract disease. Patients with IC typically describe feeling the urge to void frequently, as well as pain in the bladder and/or urethra. The painful sensation may be described as burning, pressure, sharp, or aching, and is often difficult for the patient to localize precisely. Multiple theories as to the cause of IC have been proposed with varying degrees of evidence. The current body of literature supports the idea that IC is associated with an intrinsic pathology of the bladder urothelial cells. The identification and complete characterization of antiproliferative factor (APF), which is uniquely expressed by urothelial cells in bladders affected by IC, are major advances in the understanding of IC. Additionally, urothelial cells have been likened to neurons because of their ability to express neuronal receptors and release neurotransmitters. The purinergic pathway has been shown to be upregulated in urothelial cells in bladders affected by IC. These new findings should help to direct the development of newer clinical treatments for IC. A complete understanding of IC will only be possible with parallel advances in both basic and clinical sciences.
...
PMID:New theories in interstitial cystitis. 1647 20
Interstitial cystitis is an enigmatic and frustrating condition to manage as a physician and to cope with as a patient. Traditionally, it has been defined as a chronic sterile inflammatory disease of the bladder of unknown aetiology. However, the International Continence Society prefers the term painful bladder syndrome and it has been decided to follow this terminology and refer to the disease as painful bladder syndrome/interstitial cystitis (PBS/IC). The condition is characterized by
bladder pain
,
urinary frequency
, urgency and nocturia. The quality of life of patients with PBS/IC is significantly degraded. Its aetiology is unknown, but might involve microbiologic, immunologic, mucosal, neurogenic and other yet unidentified agents. History, physical examination, urine analysis and culture as well as cystoscopy and hydrodistension are useful diagnostic tools but the final diagnosis tends to be a diagnosis of exclusion. This article will review the major theories of aetiology for PBS/IC and discuss diagnosis as well as the current treatment options with relevance to the proposed aetiologies.
...
PMID:Interstitial cystitis. 1702 74
Growing clinical and scientific data imply that the condition currently called interstitial cystitis is not just a mere bladder end-organ disease but that the symptoms perceived to be related to the bladder are rather one aspect of a complex pelvic pain syndrome. The term
bladder pain
syndrome/interstitial cystitis (BPS/IC) suggested by the European Society for the Study of IC/PBS (ESSIC) for this condition is currently the only one strictly consistent with the taxonomy guidelines of the European Association of Urology and the International Association for the Study of Pain. BPS would be diagnosed on the basis of chronic pelvic pain, pressure, or discomfort perceived to be related to the urinary bladder, accompanied by at least one other urinary symptom such as persistent urge to void or
urinary frequency
. Confusable diseases as the cause of the symptoms must be excluded. Classification of BPS types might be performed according to findings at cystoscopy with hydrodistention and morphologic findings in bladder biopsies. The end-organ condition interstitial cystitis has thus become a chronic pain syndrome with a predominantly neurovisceral pathophysiology. In daily practice, therapeutic approaches aiming at both the peripheral bladder urothelium and central nervous targets should be combined. A multimodal treatment strategy, such as the combination of tricyclic antidepressants with instillation therapy, still appears reasonable and justified.
...
PMID:[From end-organ disease to a classifiable bladder pain syndrome: paradigm shift in the understanding of urological pain syndromes exemplified by the condition currently called interstitial cystitis]. 1894 52
Interstitial cystitis (IC) is a disease of the urinary bladder with lower urinary tract symptoms such as
urinary frequency
, bladder hypersensitivity and/or
bladder pain
and resultant serious impairment of quality of life. In Japan, assuming that IC is very rare, research activity and medical care of IC have been sparse until 2001, when the Society of Interstitial Cystitis of Japan (SICJ) and a patient support group were founded.(1,2) Subsequently the International Consultation on Interstitial Cystitis Japan (ICICJ) was held in Kyoto in 2003.(3) On the other hand, the etiology of IC has not been well clarified, which complicates its diagnosis and treatment at clinical settings. We have thus developed the Japanese Clinical Guideline,(4) which is targeted at healthcare professionals including specialists in urology and women's health care who may engage in the diagnosis and treatment of IC. This article is the English translation of a shortened version of the Guideline for convenience of readers worldwide.
...
PMID:Japanese guideline for diagnosis and treatment of interstitial cystitis. 1912 May 22
Women who have symptoms related to the genitourinary system present daily in a typical family medicine practice. The most common complaints are dysuria, increased
urinary frequency
, and incontinence. In the vast majority of cases the underlying problem is either urinary tract infection, urinary incontinence without infection, or
bladder pain
without infection that may be termed painful bladder syndrome/interstitial cystitis. This article discusses epidemiology, pathophysiology, risk factors, diagnosis, and treatment of these conditions.
...
PMID:Urinary problems in women. 1923 2
Hyperexcitability of C-fiber bladder afferent pathways has been proposed to contribute to
urinary frequency
and
bladder pain
in chronic bladder inflammation including interstitial cystitis. However, the detailed mechanisms inducing afferent hyperexcitability after bladder inflammation are not fully understood. Thus, we investigated changes in the properties of bladder afferent neurons in rats with bladder inflammation induced by intravesical application of hydrochloric acid. Eight days after the treatment, bladder function and bladder sensation were analyzed using cystometry and an electrodiagnostic device of sensory function (Neurometer), respectively. Whole cell patch-clamp recordings and immunohistochemical staining were also performed in dissociated bladder afferent neurons identified by a retrograde tracing dye, Fast Blue, injected into the bladder wall. Cystitis rats showed
urinary frequency
that was inhibited by pretreatment with capsaicin and bladder hyperalgesia mediated by C-fibers. Capsaicin-sensitive bladder afferent neurons from sham rats exhibited high thresholds for spike activation and a phasic firing pattern, whereas those from cystitis rats showed lower thresholds for spike activation and a tonic firing pattern. Transient A-type K(+) current density in capsaicin-sensitive bladder afferent neurons was significantly smaller in cystitis rats than in sham rats, although sustained delayed-rectifier K(+) current density was not altered after cystitis. The expression of voltage-gated K(+) Kv1.4 alpha-subunits, which can form A-type K(+) channels, was reduced in bladder afferent neurons from cystitis rats. These data suggest that bladder inflammation increases bladder afferent neuron excitability by decreasing expression of Kv1.4 alpha-subunits. Similar changes in capsaicin-sensitive C-fiber afferent terminals may contribute to bladder hyperactivity and hyperalgesia due to acid-induced bladder inflammation.
...
PMID:Bladder hyperactivity and increased excitability of bladder afferent neurons associated with reduced expression of Kv1.4 alpha-subunit in rats with cystitis. 1927 88
A clinical guideline and algorism for interstitial cystitis and hypersensitive bladder syndrome has been developed by a group of East Asian urologists as a revised form of the Japanese guideline for interstitial cystitis. The guideline defines interstitial cystitis (IC) as a disease of the urinary bladder diagnosed by 3 requirements; 1) a characteristic complex of lower urinary tract symptoms, 2) bladder pathology such as Hunner's ulcer and bladder bleeding after overdistension, and 3) exclusions of confusable diseases. The characteristic symptom complex is termed as hypersensitive bladder syndrome (HBS), which is defined as bladder hypersensitivity, usually associated with
urinary frequency
, with or without
bladder pain
. For the definite diagnosis of IC, cytoscopy or hydrodistension is crutial; HBS is the diagnosis when IC is suspected but not confirmed by the 3 requirements. Numerous therapeutic options are available; however, most of them lack in high level of evidence, leaving a few as recommended therapies. Etiology of IC are multifactorial; the interaction among nervous, immune and endocrine factors forms a vicious cycle, provocating and maintaining inflammatory reactions in the bladder. The inclusion and efficacy criteria for clinical trials should be standardized to enhance the clinical research for this disabling disease, which has proved to be more prevalent than previously believed.
...
PMID:Clinical guidelines for interstitial cystitis and hypersensitive bladder syndrome. 1954 99
A classic triad of symptoms (
bladder pain
,
urinary frequency
, and urgency) has served to define
bladder pain
syndrome/painful bladder syndrome/interstitial cystitis (BPS/PBS/IC) syndrome. BPS/PBS/IC is a distinct condition and it is likely that the urgency experienced by these patients differs from that experienced by those with overactive bladder syndrome. It is unclear how best to define urgency in the BPS/PBS/IC setting. Differences in the other primary symptoms associated with these conditions probably influence how urgency is perceived. Advances in research into the pathophysiology of urgency and underlying disease processes will help to optimize both the diagnosis and treatment of BPS/PBS/IC.
...
PMID:Bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis: a sense of urgency. 1955 86
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