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Bladder pain: Clinical assessment and treatment - Abstract Show Comments PDF Print E-mail
  
Thursday, 05 November 2009

Acute Pain Unit, Department of Anesthesiology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston Salem NC, 27157, USA.

Bladder pain may arise due to infection, inflammation, trauma, cancer, or unknown reasons. Bladder pain may be acute, long term and/or associated with other symptoms and syndromes. The treatment of bladder pain must consider both the pain and the function of the bladder.

The definition, physiology, assessment, pharmacological treatment, and nonpharmacological treatment of bladder pain are reviewed and discussed. Three cases of complex bladder pain are presented.

Bladder pain is a symptom, not a disease. There is no single therapy that is helpful for all patients. Multimodal pain therapy that is tailored to the patient's present situation, genetics, ongoing treatment, and previous treatment(s) may reduce pain and improve quality of life.

Multidisciplinary evaluation and referral to a pain specialist should be considered for patients with complicated bladder pain with or without associated long-term pain problems. Patients with complex bladder pain may benefit from a consultation and second opinion from a pain specialist early in the course of the workup and not as a last measure when everything else has failed. Multidisciplinary pain teams with pain specialists should be part of the network available for clinicians who provide care for patients with complex pain problems.

Written by:
Dagmar Westerling.   Are you the author?

Reference:
UroToday Int J. 2009 Aug;2(4).
doi:10.3834/uij.1944-5784.2009.08.03

UroToday.com IC/PBS/BPS Section

Reader Comments
Jill Osborne - President Interstitial Cy
Written by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on 2009-11-09 11:24:13
Our complements to the author. This article is, by far, the best discussion of bladder pain that we've seen to date. I particularly appreciated the extensive treatment discussion. It's quite interesting that so many patient find relief once their constipation is treated. We've seen this in diet and IC studies as well where patients report strong improvement in their discomfort with the use of certain laxatives.  
 
Bravo and well done! I'll be sharing this with many of our colleagues.

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