This document discusses neurogenic bladder, which occurs due to neurological dysfunction or insult to the nervous system. It describes the anatomy and functions of the normal bladder, as well as the different types of neurogenic bladder based on the level of neurological insult (e.g. suprapontine, pontine, spinal). Treatment options are discussed, including behavioral therapies, medications, injections, surgeries and procedures like clean intermittent catheterization and sacral anterior root stimulation. The goals of bladder management and treatment considerations for different types of neurogenic bladder are also summarized.
2. Neurogenic bladder is a term applied to a
malfunctioning urinary bladder due to neurologic
dysfunction or insult emanating from internal or
external trauma, disease, or injury of nervous
system.
• Presentation
• detrusor underactivity to over activity
• site of neurologic insult
3. Anatomy
• Hollow muscular organ
• Extra-peritoneal
• Pelvis when empty
• Capacity – 400-500
• 2 parts
• Body
• Base – trigone + Bladder neck
4. Urinary Bladder Anatomy
• The mucosal lining on the base of
the bladder is smooth and firmly
attached to the underlying
smooth muscle coat of the wall-
unlike elsewhere in the bladder
where the mucosa is folded and
loosely attached to the wall.The
smooth triangular area between
the openings of the ureters and
urethra on the inside of the
bladder is known as the trigone.
5. Detrusor Muscle
• Smooth muscle
• 3 layers of interlacing fibres
• At the neck- circular
component of muscle is
thickened -> sphincter vesicae
• Histology
myofibrils are arranged into
fascicles in random direction
6. Bladder Functions
• Storage
• at low pressure
• convenient and socially acceptable to void
• visco-elasticity: detrusor muscle cell increase length without
change in tension
• 50% collagen, 2% elastin
• Increase in collagen -> decrease in compliance
7. Bladder function
• Voiding
• Micturition relies on a neurally mediated detrusor contraction
• initiated by inhibition of the striated sphincter and pelvic floor
• followed some seconds later by a contraction of the detrusor muscle.
• Causes a rise in detrusor pressure
8. Nerve supply
• Parasympathetic (S2,3,4)
1. Detrusor contraction
2. Internal Sphincter relax.
• Sympathetic (L1,2,3)
• To sympathetic Ganglia on
bladder wall
• Somatic – Pudendal nerve
• Motor to external urethral
sphincter
• Sensations from urethra
9.
10. Control of Micturation
• 1.Cortical micturition centre
• 2.Pontine micturition centre
• 3.Spinal micturition centre
• 4. Peripheral nerves(S2,3,4)
Sympathetic
(T11 –L2)
Parasympathetic
( S2,3,4)
11. Cortical micturation centre(CMC)
Location: Paracentral lobule in the medial aspect of the
frontoparietal cotex
Function: Inhibitory to PMC
Dysfunction – loss of social control of bladder
The brain’s control of the PMC is part of the social
training that children experience at age 2 - 4 years
12. Pontine Micturition Centre (PMC)
Also called Barrington’s nucleus
Lateral region
• Function - continence, storage urine
• stimulation results in a powerful contraction of the urethral sphincter
Medial region
• Function - micturition center
• stimulation results in decrease in urethral pressure and silence of
pelvic floor EMG signal, followed by a rise in detrusor pressure.
13. Sacral reflex or Sacral/Primitive micturition
center (SMC/PMC)
Sacral parasympathetic nucleus
(SPN): S234- pelvic splanchnic
nerves (nervi erigentes)
Somatic – Onufoid nuclei
• Collection of external urethral
sphinter motoneurones
Levator Ani Motoneurones
18. d) Sacral and subsacral lesions
I) Afferent fibres involved only –
• “Atonic /Areflexic bladder”
• Overflow incontinence
• Straining for micturition
II) Both afferent and efferent involved –
• “Autonomous bladder”
• Small capacity , acting of its own. No
DSD/DH
19. Hinman syndrome: Non –neurogenic neurogenic
bladder. Severe bladder sphincter dyssynergia.
Trabeculated bladder develops a high pressure
state with B/L VUR and large PVR akin to a
neurogenic bladder without any obvious
neurological abnormality. May lead to renal
failure.
20. Approach
• Detailed medical history
• h/o trauma
• h/o pelvic surgery
• h/o neurologic disease
• h/o urologic symptoms (incontinence, UTI)
21. Physical exam
• Perineal sensation (pudendal afferent limb)
• Anal sphinctor tone (distinguish suprasacral-increased/ sacral lesion-
reduced)
• Lower extremeity spasticity
• Bulbocavernosus reflex
• Test integrity of sacral micturition center S2-4, pudental afferent/efferent limb
• The S2 S4 reflex arc can be elicited by squeezing the glans in males or clitoris in females and
looking for contraction of the anal sphincter S2-S4
• Morbid obesity and mobility
• Lack of adequate hand function
• Palpable bladder
24. Goals of Bladder Management
• Protect upper tract (low pressure storage)
• Complete bladder emptying (prevent UTI and stone)
• Preserve continence
• Maintain quality living
25. Behavioural therapy
• Pelvic floor muscle training with biofeedback e.g. vaginal cone
• Bladder training (voiding in fixed and gradually increasing schedule, urge
inhibition)
• Decreasing caffeine intake
• Avoid abnormally high fluid intake and carbonated beverages
• Weight loss if obesity
27. Treatment of patients with suprasacral
spinal injury? DO + DSD
It is both a storage and voiding disorder
Start with some non-invasive treatment:
To control storage problem:
• Anti-cholinergic medication (oxybutynin, tolterodine)
• Reduce intravescial storage pressure
• Improve detrusor compliance
• Keep DLPP <40cm H20
• Increase functional bladder capacity, reduce urgency and urge incontinence
To enhance emptying:
• Intermittent catheterization
28. Surgical options
To improve storage:
• BotulinumToxin
• Reduce intravesical pressure, improve compliance and capacity,
improve continence, reduce anti-cholinergic dosage
• 300 units of Botox at 30 sites
• If for sphincter :Not as successful as in detrusor, Injected at 3,6,9 &
12 O O’clock clock
• Clam augmentation enterocystoplasty + CIC
29. Surgical options
To improve voiding:
• External sphincterotomy
• Urethral stent- Memokath, Alloy of NiTi , Deploy hot water 55°C, Removal cold
water 5°C
To abolished the autonoic desreflexia + coordinate muscle
contraction:
• Detrusor myectomy
• SARS with dorsal rhizotomy – not suitable for patient who is still
walking or incomplete SCI
30. External Sphincterotomy
Colling’s electrocautery knife
Anteromedian incision (12 o’clock)
Proximal part of verumontanum ->
Corpus spongiosum of the bulbous
urethra
Plane of periurethral venous
sinuses
Large bore catheter (24-48 hours)
Bladder irrigation
31. External sphincterotomy
Results
• 70% successful rate
• Resolution of hydronephrosis /
improvedVUR
• Reduced febrile UTIs
• Reduced autonomic dysreflexia
• Reduction in PVR
• Reduction in mean voiding
pressure
Complications
• Bleeding (clot retention)
• Severe infection
• Impotence
• Reoperation (50%)
• Laser sphincterotomy has
better results
• Not done often now –
irreversible
32. Transurethral Surgery
• Botulinum A toxin injection
• Balloon dilatation
• Endourethral stent
• Comparable outcomes
• Less transfusion
• Stricture formation
• Encrustation / migration
33. Sacral Anterior Roots Stimulation (SARS)
Sacral Nerve Neuromodulation
• Procedures to enhance detrusor
contractility, usually
accompanied by with Dorsal
Sacral Rhizotomy (abolish hyper-
reflexia )
• Suitable for patient wheelchair
bound and complete SCI
• Connection of anterior motor
roots to implant slots and implant
(“The Finetech-Brindley bladder
controller”) placed
34. Treatment for infrasacral lesion
Detrusor underactivity
• Intermittent catheterization
• Indwelling catheter
• Suprapubic catheter
• Valsava manuever: contraindicated in VUR or hydronephrosis
• Reflex voiding
• Cholinergic agonist: no randomized trials have demonstrated
efficay over placebo
35. Surgical management
Ileovesicostomy
• Low pressure conduit for
preferential drainage
(<10cmH2O)
• Native bladder as
continent reservoir
• Native ureterovesical
junction
• Easy stoma care
36. CIC- clean intermittent self- catheterization
• GOLD standard for Mx of NLUTD (EAU guidelines)
• Jack Lapides 1972
• Promoted & popularized CIC
• First applying concept to large groups of pts with voiding dysfunction
• Demonstrated safety & long term efficacy
• Most effective & practical means for attaining catheter free state in
SCI
• Effective method for pts with emptying failure, esp after failed
attempts ↑ Pves / ↓ outlet resistance
• Helps to prevent UTI & protect upper tract
37. CIC prerequisite
• Cooperative, well-motivated pt / family
• Adequate hand control
• Adequate urethral exposure
Complications
• Urethral false passage
• Bladder perforation
• Silent deterioration of upper tracts
• Bacteriuria common (not symptomatic infection )
38. Reflex voiding
• SCI / diseases with neurogenic DO
• Manual stimulation of certain areas within sacral / lumbar
dermatomes may provoke reflex bladder contraction (Wein 1988)
• Triggers: pulling skin / hair of pubis, scrotum, thigh; squeeze clitoris,
digital rectal
• Form of timed voiding