Urogynaecology Flashcards

1
Q

How is the bladder function controlled?

A

 External sphincter and pelvic floor muscles maintaining urethral pressure > bladder pressure
 Micturition occurs when these muscles relax and bladder detrusor muscle contracts
 Neuronal – para aids voiding, symp prevents it

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2
Q

How common is stress incontinence? What is stress urinary incontinence? Causes?

A
  • Commonest urinary complaint, 1 in 10 will suffer
  • The involuntary leak of urine on effort or exertion, or on sneezing or coughing.
  • The leakage is usually a small discrete amount, coinciding with the physical activity
  • Due to urethral sphincter weakness or prolapse of sphincter below pelvic floor
  • Increased intra-abdominal pressure transmitted to the bladder but not the urethra. Bladder pressure > urethral pressure when intra-abdominal pressure is raised (e.g. when coughing).
  • Causes: pregnancy, oestrogen deficiency at menopause, surgery, radiation
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3
Q

How common is urge incontinence? What is urge urinary incontinence? Causes?

A
  • Common, affects 1 in 6 women
  • The involuntary leakage of urine accompanied by, or immediately preceded by, a strong desire to pass urine (void).
  • Uncontrolled increases in detrusor pressure increasing bladder pressure beyond that of the normal urethra.
  • ‘Overactive bladder’ previously called ‘detrusor instability’ is the most common cause of this mechanism.
  • Causes – idiopathic, MS, spina bifida, UMN lesions, surgery
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4
Q

What is mixed urinary incontinence?

A

• The involuntary leakage of urine associated both with urgency and with exertion, effort, sneezing or coughing.

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5
Q

What is overflow incontinence?

A
  • Occurs when the bladder becomes large and flaccid and has little or no detrusor tone or function.
  • This is usually due to injury or insult (e.g. blockage, after surgery or post-partum)
  • The condition is diagnosed when the urinary residual is more than 50% of bladder capacity.
  • The bladder simply leaks when it becomes full.
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6
Q

When does continuous urinary incontinence occur?

A

• Classically it is associated with a fistula or congenital abnormality (e.g. ectopic ureter)

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7
Q

Symptoms of urinary incontinence?

A

Stress - leakage of urine on sneezing, coughing, exercise, rising from sitting or lifting

Urge - urgency and failure to reach toilet, frequency and nocturia possible

Other symptoms to ask:
Frequency during day/night, dysuria, haematuria,, dribbling of urine after leaving toilet, feeling incomplete bladder emptying

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8
Q

Gynae history important in urinary incontinence?

A
Uterus or not
Pre/Postmenopausal
Problems with intercourse
How many babies - delivery method
Smear tests up to date
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9
Q

PMH important in urinary incontinence?

A

Prolapse symptoms - dragging, feel mass, backache
Constipation
Chronic cough
Diabetes

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10
Q

DH important in urinary incontinence?

A

Diuretics
Laxatives
Medications for urinary symptoms in past

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11
Q

SH for urinary incontinence?

A
Caffeine intake
Carbonated drinks
Alcohol
Smoking
Ketamine
Occupation - heavy lifting?
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12
Q

Examination performed in incontinence?

A
History including obstetric, sexual and functional status
BMI and Urine dipstick & MSU
Abdominal and pelvic examination
Cough - any leakage?
Assess for prolapse
Assess for vaginal atrophy
VE
Smear
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13
Q

Investigations in urinary incontinence?

A
  • Urinalysis and MSU microscopy (culture and sensitivity)
    o Exclude UTI
  • OGTT if diabetes suspected
  • Frequency/volume chart
    o Should be filled in for 72h and give idea off fluid intake and voiding problems
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14
Q

When should a cystoscopy be performed in urinary incontinence?

A

o Used to visualise urinary tract

o Indicated if recurrent UTI, haematuria, bladder pain, suspected fistula, tumour

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15
Q

What are the specialist tests performed for urinary incontinence?How do they work?

A

Urodynamics

o Uroflowmetry
Ability of bladder to store and void urine
Patient voids in private onto commode with urinary flow meter, measuring voided volume over time and plotting graph
o Cystometry
Invasive and involves measuring pressure and volume in bladder during filling and voiding
Bladder filled with saline and intravesical & vaginal/rectal probe measure differences in pressure to give detrusor pressure
Patient first desire to void, strong desire to void and cough
Diagnoses stress incontinence

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16
Q

Initial management of stress urinary incontinence?

A
Lifestyle interventions
•	Weight reduction if BMI >30
•	Smoking cessation
•	Reduce caffeine and fizzy drinks
•	Treatment of chronic cough and constipation

Pelvic floor muscle training
• For at least 3 months
• Exercises continued long-term.
• 8-12 slow maximal contractions sustained for 6-8 seconds each, 3x per day

Follow up 3 months

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17
Q

Follow up management of stress urinary incontinence?

A

Urodynamics

MDT Meeting

Duloxetine
• SNRI enhances urethral striated sphincter activity via a centrally mediated pathway.
• Dose-dependent decreases in frequency of incontinence episodes

Transvaginal tape

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18
Q

Pharmacological management of stress urinary incontinence?

A

Duloxetine
• SNRI enhances urethral striated sphincter activity via a centrally mediated pathway.
• Dose-dependent decreases in frequency of incontinence episodes

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19
Q

Surgical management of stress urinary incontinence ? When considered and what types?

A

Considered when other measures failed

Transvaginal Tape
• Polypropylene mesh tape placed under mid-urethra via small vaginal incision
• Risks – bladder injury, voiding difficulty, tape erosion

Periuretheral injections
• Bulking agents, better for older, frail or young women

20
Q

Initial management of urge urinary incontinence?

A

Lifestyle advice
• Weight reduction if BMI >30, smoking cessation, reduce caffeine and fizzy drinks, treatment chronic cough and constipation

Pelvic floor muscle training
• 3 months, exercises continued long-term, 8-12 slow maximal contractions sustained for 6-8 seconds each, 3x per day

Bladder diary (>3 days) - idea of fluid intake and bladder voiding problems

Bladder drills
• Ability to suppress urinary urge and extend the intervals between voiding

Anticholinergics - Oxybutynin (+/- vaginal oestrogen if vaginal atrophy)

Follow up 3 months

21
Q

Describe properties of initial pharmacological management of urge urinary incontinence? SE? CI?

When is botox used?

A

Anticholinergic (antimuscarinic) agents (oxybutynin)
• Block the sympathetic nerves thereby relaxing the detrusor muscle
• Side effects = dry mouth (up to 30%), constipation, nausea, dyspepsia, flatulence, blurred vision, dizziness, insomnia, palpitation, arrhythmias.
• Contraindications = acute (narrow angle) glaucoma, myaesthenia gravis, urinary retention or outflow obstruction, severe UC, GI obstruction.

Oestrogens
• In women with vaginal atrophy, intravaginal oestrogens may be tried

Botulinum Toxin A
• Blocks neuromuscular transmission – causing the muscle to become weak.
• Used in follow up and injected cystoscopically into the detrusor, usually under local anaesthetic.

22
Q

Follow up management of urge urinary incontinence?

A

Try 2nd anticholinergic (tolterodine)

Urodynamic study (increased detrusor pressure upon voiding)

MDT meeting

Cystoscopy & Botox (botulinum toxin A)

Nerve stimulation - percutaneous posterior nerve/percutaneous sacral nerve

Augmentation cystoplasty - if small bladder

Urinary diversion

23
Q

Management of overflow incontinence?

A

o Treat with catheter
• Can cause urinary retention in 5-20% of cases, in which intermittent self catherterisation may be required.
o Surgical
 Reserved as last resort for debilitating symptoms, failed therapies
 Bladder distension, sacral neuromodulation, detrusor myomectomy have limited efficacy

24
Q

How common is urogenital prolapse?

A
  • Occurs in 40-60% of parous women

* Most common reason postmenopausal women have hysterectomy

25
Definition of urogenital prolapse?
o Weakness of supporting structures (levator ani muscles and endopelvic fascia) allows the pelvic organs to protrude within the vagina o Can be bladder, urethra, rectum, and bowel
26
Risk factors of urogenital prolapse?
``` o Increasing age o Vaginal delivery o Increasing parity o Obesity o FHx of prolapse o Constipation/Chronic cough ```
27
Types of urogenital prolapse?
o Can occur in anterior, middle or posterior compartments of pelvis
28
Anterior types of urogenital prolapse?
```  Cystocele • Prolapse of bladder into the vagina  Urethrocele • Prolapse of urethra into the vagina, associated with USI  Cysto-urethrocele when both (MC) ```
29
Middle types of of urogenital prolapse?
 Uterine prolapse • Descent of uterus into vagina • Baden-Walker Graded  Vaginal vault prolapse • Descent of vaginal vault post-hysterectomy, associated cystocele, rectocele and enterocele common  Enterocele • Herniation of pouch of Douglas into vagina • Pouch usually contains loops of small bowel
30
Posterior types of urogenital prolapse?
 Rectocele | • Prolapse of rectum into vagina
31
POPQ staging of urogenital prolapse?
o 0 = No prolapse o 1 = >1cm above hymen o 2 = At level of hymen o 3 = >1cm below hymen but protrudes <2cm total length of vagina o 4 = Complete eversion of vagina (complete procidentia)
32
General symptoms of urogenital prolapse?
- Dragging sensation discomfort, and heaviness within the pelvis.  Usually worse at the end of the day or when standing up. - Feeling of ‘a lump coming down’ - Dyspareunia or difficulty in inserting tampons. - Discomfort and backache.
33
Cysto-urethrocele symptoms of urogenital prolapse?
- Urinary urgency and frequency. - Incontinence - Incomplete bladder emptying o Urinary retention or reduced flow where the urethra kinked
34
Rectocele symptoms of urogenital prolapse?
- Constipation | - Difficulty with defecation (may digitally reduce it to defecate).
35
Other symptoms of urogenital prolapse?
* Symptoms tend to become worse with prolonged standing and towards the end of the day. * Grade 3 or 4 prolapse, there may be mucosal ulceration and lichenification, resulting in vaginal bleeding and discharge. * Symptoms can affect quality of life, causing social, psychological, occupational or sexual limitations to a woman’s lifestyle.
36
Examinations performed in urogenital prolapse?
• Examine patient in both standing and left lateral position o Ask woman to strain and observe • Bimanual examination (exclude pelvic masses) • Sims speculum examination o Inspect anterior and posterior walls, ask to strain
37
Investigations of urogenital prolapse?
* USS to exclude pelvic or abdominal masses. * Urodynamics are required if urinary incontinence is present * Assess fitness for surgery – ECG, CXR, FBC, U&Es
38
Prevention of urogenital prolapse? | Conservative management of urogenital prolapse?
Prevention - Reduction of prolonged labour, trauma caused by instrumental delivery - Encouraging persistence with post-natal pelvic floor exercises. General Advice - Weight reduction - Avoid heavy lifting - Treatment of chronic constipation and cough (including smoking cessation) - Pelvic floor muscle exercises
39
Further management of urogenital prolapse - Intravaginal (pessary) devices? When used? What is it? Instructions?
- Conservative line of therapy for women who decline surgery, who are unfit for surgery, or for whom surgery is contraindicated. o Artificial pelvic floor placed in the vagina to stay behind the symphysis pubic and in front of the sacrum. o Sexually active women can use ring pessaries, either have sex with it in place or take it out and replace after o They should be changed 6 monthly and if post-menopausal, topical oestrogen may be given to decrease risk of vaginal erosion.
40
Types of pessary and when used?
Ring pessary = most commonly used o Placed between the posterior aspect of the symphysis pubis and posterior fornix of the vagina. Shelf pessary = used when a correctly sized ring pessary will not sit in the vagina and/or where the perineum is deficient Others: Hodge pessary, cube and doughnut pessaries (very rarely used).
41
Indications for surgical management of urogenital prolapse?
- Failure of conservative treatment - Voiding or defaecation problems - Recurrent prolapse after surgery - Ulceration - Irreducible prolapse - Preference
42
Surgical management of anterior compartment of urogenital prolapse?
• Anterior colporrhaphy (anterior repair) | - Appropriate for repair of a cysto-urethrocele.
43
Surgical management of posterior compartment of urogenital prolapse?
``` Posterior colporrhaphy (posterior repair) - Appropriate for correction of a rectocele and deficient perineum ```
44
Surgical management of uterovaginal (apical) compartment of urogenital prolapse?
* Vaginal hysterectomy (most common) * Sacrohysteropexy - Preserve the uterus. - Attaches the prolapsed uterus to the sacrum
45
Surgical management of vaginal vault of urogenital prolapse?
• Sacrospinous ligament fixation | - Suturing vaginal vault to sacrospinous ligaments using a vaginal approach.
46
Surgical management of recurrent compartment of urogenital prolapse?
* ~1/3 of prolapse surgery is for recurrent prolapse. * Vaginal epithelium may be scarred and atrophic (makes surgery harder and gives increased risk of damage to bladder and bowel)