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KMID : 1240020180220040268
International Neurourology Journal
2018 Volume.22 No. 4 p.268 ~ p.274
Urethral Pressure Measurement as a Tool for the Urodynamic Diagnosis of Detrusor Sphincter Dyssynergia
Corona Lauren E.

Cameron Anne P.
Clemens J. Quentin
Qin Yongmei
Stoffel John T.
Abstract
Purpose: To describe a technique for urodynamic diagnosis of detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (DSD) using urethral pressure measurements and examine potential associations between urethral pressure and bladder physiology among patients with DSD.

Methods: Multiple sclerosis (MS) and spinal cord injured (SCI) patients with known DSD diagnosed on videourodynamics (via electromyography or voiding cystourethrography) were retrospectively identified. Data from SCI and MS patients with detrusor overactivity (DO) without DSD were abstracted as control group. Urodynamics tracings were reviewed and urethral pressure DSD was defined based on comparison of DSD and control groups.

Results: Seventy-two patients with DSD were identified. Sixty-two (86%) had >20 cm H2O urethral pressure amplitude during detrusor contraction. By comparison, 5 of 23 (22%) of control group had amplitude of >20 cm H2O during episode of DO. Mean duration of urethral pressure DSD episode was 66 seconds (range, 10?500 seconds) and mean urethral pressure amplitude was 73 cm H2O (range, 1?256 cm H2O). Longer (>30 seconds) DSD episodes were significantly associated with male sex (81% vs. 50%, P=0.013) and higher bladder capacity (389 mL vs. 219 mL, P=0.0004). Urethral pressure amplitude measurements during DSD were not associated with significant urodynamic variables or neurologic pathology.

Conclusions: Urethral pressure amplitude of >20 cm H2O during detrusor contraction occurred in 86% of patients with known DSD. Longer DSD episodes were associated with larger bladder capacity. Further studies exploring the relationship between urethral pressure measurements and bladder physiology could phenotype DSD as a measurable variable rather than a categorical observation.
KEYWORD
Urodynamics, Detrusor sphincter dyssynergia, Spinal cord injuries, Multiple sclerosis
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