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Spinal cord injury. Hann-Chorng Kuo Department of Urology Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital Hualien. Leading causes & Location of Spinal cord injury. Motor vehicle accidents (47%) Falls (21%) Sports (14%) Act of violence (14%)
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Spinal cord injury Hann-Chorng Kuo Department of Urology Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital Hualien
Leading causes & Location of Spinal cord injury • Motor vehicle accidents (47%) • Falls (21%) • Sports (14%) • Act of violence (14%) • Location of SCI: cervical (53%), thoracic (35%), lumbar and sacral (10%)
Urinary tract symptoms in Acute spinal cord injury • Spinal shock stage: detrusor areflexia, complete anesthesia of fullness or voiding • Recovery of micturition reflex gradually about 1-3 months after recovery of somatic reflexes • Prolonged recovery of voiding reflex may be due to overdistension of the bladder after injury or complication
Micturition Control • Micturition reflex center – sacral cords S 2-4 • Sympathetic nucleus – T10-L1 • Micturition control center – pons • Sensory motor center – frontal lobe • Limbic system • Cerebellum, Basal ganglia
Pathophysiology of lower urinary tract dysfunction after SCI • Suprasacral cord lesion – interruption of coordination of detrusor contraction and sphincter relaxation • Lesion above T6 SCI – sympathetic hyperactivity during activation of visceral input, bladder distension, rectal distention, cold and noxious stimulation, surgery and infection
Chronic spinal cord injury and urinary tract dysfunction • Autonomic dysreflexia – SCI above T5,6 (sympathetic nucleus) • Detrusor external sphincter dyssynergia (DESD) – lesion above S2-4 • Detrusor hyperreflexia – complete or incomplete SCI above sacral cords • Detrosor areflexia – sacral cord SCI or cauda equina lesions
Major concern in managing SCI • Preservation of renal function • Free of symptomatic urinary tract infection • Efficient bladder emptying • Freedom of catheter • Continence
High risk SCI Patients • Complete neurological lesion • Cervical SCI with quadriplegia • Prolonged indwelling catheter • High detrusor leak-point pressure • Presence of DESD and AD • Large residual urine • Presence of vesicoureteral reflux
Detrusor leak-point pressure • The intravesical pressure (detrusor pressure) at the end of filling or urinary incontinence • A detrusor LPP of over 40cm water will endanger the upper tract in meningomyelocele • Reduction of detrusor LPP can improve renal function, reduce the risk of UTI, decrease the degree of hydronephrosis, improve vesicoureteral reflux and restore continence
Hydronephrosis in SCI • Hydronephrosis is a sign of upper tract deterioration after SCI • In 251 SCI patients, 24 (9.6%) had hydronephrosis, including: Cervical SCI 7 (5.9% of 118), 7+ 4 (3-15) years Thorac& lumb 8 (8.6% of 93), 9.9+ 6.5 (3-22) Sacral 9 (22.5 of 40), 17+ 6.1 (8-26)
Autonomic dysreflexia • Spinal cord lesion above T6 • Hypertension and increased sympathetic outflow, flushing, sweating above dermatome during increased visceral input (bladder over-distension,urination, rectal distension, surgery, UTI) • Risk of heart failure and stroke • Bladder neck contraction during voiding
Detrusor external sphincter dyssynergia (DESD) • Spinal cord lesion above micturition reflex center • Lack of coordination in the micturition center • External sphincter contrction during detrusor contractions • Dysuria, difficult to initiate voiding, high voiding pressure, large residual urine • Result in frequent UTI and upper tract damage
Grades of DESD • Grade 0- 3 according to the sphincteric activity • Grade 0 – normal or synergia • Grade 1 – DH &high Pves, hyerreflexic sphincter at initiation, voiding with mild residual urine • Grade 2 – DH or hyporeflexic detrusor, intermittent hyperreflexic sphincter, large residual urine • Grade 3 – DH, closed hyperreflexic sphincter, no spontaneous voiding
Late Urological Complications in Spinal cord injury • Urinary tract infection induced sepsis • Hydronephrosis and uremia • Stone formation (renal& bladder stone) • Contracted bladder & VU reflux • Incontinence and associated complications • Bladder tumor formation (chronic indwelling catheter)
The relationship of UTI frequency and SCI level and voiding management
Considerations in management of LUTD in chronic SCI • Correct complications Treat hydronephrosis, treat UTI, treat vesicoureteral reflux • Improve quality of life Treat incontinence, convenience of bladder emptying, free of catheter,free of medication Individual treatment strategy for each SCI patient
Medical Treatment for LUTD in chronic SCI • To reduce detrusor hyperreflexia – anticholinergics (oxybutynin,imipramine) • To reduce bladder neck hyperreflexia – alpha-blocker (tamsulosin, terazosin, prazosin) • To reduce striated sphincter spasticity – skeletal muscle relaxant (baclofen, diazepam) • To increase detrusor muscle tone – cholinergic agent (urecholine)
Combination of medication for LUTS in Chronic SCI • To treat incontinence – anticholinergics and adrenergic agnist (methylephedrine) – CISC is needed, residual urine, UTI should be monitored • To facilitate voiding – cholinergic agent and alpha-blocker and skeletal muscle relaxant – incontinence exacerbates, upper tract deterioration if detrusor LPP is high
Side effects of Medical Treatment in chronic SCI • Constipation -- anticholinergics • Hypotension –alpha-blocker • Nasal congestion –adrenergic agonist • General weakness – skeletal muscle relaxant • Side effects increase as combination of medication • Cost benefit should be considered
Intravesical therapy for SCI • Detrusor hyperreflexia – oxybutynin, capsaicin, resiniferatoxin, botulinum injection • Reversible response • Periodic instillation or injection
Capsaicin and resiniferatoxin • Intravesical agents for overactive bladder have been mostly been used in neurogenic bladder disorders • Capsaicin and resiniferatoxin have been successfully used intravesically to reduce urinary incontinence in neurogenic detrusor hyperreflexia • Resiniferatoxin has less acute side effect and similar efficacy as capsaicin • Resiniferatoxin is effective in treating detrusor hyperreflexia refractory to capsaicin treatment
Therapeutic effects of resiniferatoxin • 10 -5 to 10 -7 M RTX is effective for DH of SCI • 10 -8 M RTX can significantly improve voiding pattern and pain score in hypersensitive disorders and bladder pain • RTX is safe for application in humans • Is RTX effective for DESD through inhibition of DH in SCI patients?
Successful Therapeutic Effects • Patient became dry • Increase in 50% of maximal cystometric capacity • Subjective improvement rate by >50% in incontinence or dysuria • Significant change in quality of life in urination subjectively
Side Effects of RTX Treatment • Autonomic responses • Elevated blood pressure • Headache • Bradycardia • General malaise • RTX was drained out and bladder irrigation was performed if systolic BP >200mmHg
Results of resiniferatoxin therapy • 20 patients (7 women and 13 men) • Mean age 42.2 ±13.2 (24 – 66) years • 10 cervical, 10 thoracic SC lesion • 18 traumatic SCI, 2 multiple sclerosis • All had DESD, 9 had autonomic dysreflexia • 18 incontinence, 13 dysuria, 8 recurrent UTI
Responses of RTX instillation • Initial excitatory response at 1-5 min • Four types of initial responses Type 1: A sustained high pressure followed by complete detrusor non-contraction Type 2: A high pressure contraction followed by progressively lower amplitude contractions Type 3: Intermittent high pressure contractions Type 4: Intermittent low pressure contractions
Therapeutic Results of RTX • 4/20 became dry during the daytime but incontinent at night time • 8/20 had increased in frequency interval and voided volume • 8/20 had no significant improvement • 8/13 with dysuria had improvement in spontaneous voiding (5) or on Crede maneuver (3)
Side Effects and QOL after RTX • Dizziness and headache with high BP and bradycardia (4/20) • Initial gross hematuria (5/20) • Bladder irritation and frequency in all patients • 7/20 responded that quality o life improved after RTX • 13/20 did not notice any significant change in QOL although objective data showed improved
Correlation of RTX Responses with Therapeutic Results • A good response was noted in 12 patients • Type 1: 5 (100%) • Type 2: 4 (80%) • Type 3: 2 (40%) • Type 4: 1 (25%) • Duration of RTX responses: 1 (6m), 6 (3m), 3 (2m), 2 (1m), repeat instillation in 7/12
Urodynamic tracings before, during and after resiniferatoxin
Botulinum toxin injection • Botlinum toxin has been used to inject striated urethral sphincter for grade 3 DESD • Refractory detrusor hyperreflexia can be eradicated by intra-detrusor injection of botox • Reversible effect and possibilty of antibody formation after repeated injection • Cost-benefit should be weighed
Botulinum A Toxin Detrusor Injection for Detrusor Hyperreflexia • 5 IU/Kg Botox (Botulinum A toxin) was injected to 30 sites into detrusor muscle • Decreased detrusor pressure and increased cystometric capacity after Botox • Increased residual urine and CISC is needed • Abdominal tapping to void • Indicated in refractory detrusor hyperreflexia