Abstract
Dysmenorrhea is a common risk factor for chronic pain conditions including bladder pain syndrome. Few studies have formally evaluated asymptomatic bladder pain sensitivity in dysmenorrhea, and whether this largely reflects excess pelvic symptom reporting due to comorbid psychological dysfunction. We sought to determine whether bladder hypersensitivity is more common among women reporting moderate or greater dysmenorrhea, without chronic pain elsewhere, after accounting for anxiety and depression. Demonstrating this would suggest that dysmenorrhea might be an early clue for visceral or widespread pain hypersensitivity and improve understanding of potential precursors to bladder pain syndrome. We compared cohorts of regularly menstruating women, without symptoms of chronic pain elsewhere, reporting (1) moderate-to-severe dysmenorrhea (n= 98) and (2) low levels or no menstrual pain (n= 35). Participants underwent rapid bladder filling following a standard water ingestion protocol, serially rating bladder pain and relative urgency during subsequent distension. Potential differences in bladder volumes were controlled for by sonographic measurement at standard cystometric thresholds. Bladder sensitivity was also measured with complementary measures at other times separately including a simplified rapid filling test, palpation of the bladder wall, and through ambulatory self-report. Anxiety and depression were evaluated with the National Institutes of Health Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System measures. Women with moderate-to-severe dysmenorrhea reported more urinary symptoms than controls and had a lower maximum capacity (498 ± 18 mL vs 619 ± 34 mL, P < .001) and more evoked bladder filling pain (0-100 visual analog scale: 25 ± 3 vs 12 ± 3, P < .001). The dysmenorrhea-bladder capacity relationship remained significant irrespective of menstrual pain severity, anxiety, depression, or bladder pain (R2= 0.13, P= .006). Severity of menstrual pain predicted evoked bladder pain (R2= 0.10, P= .008) independent of anxiety (P= .21) and depression (P= .21). Women with moderate-to-severe dysmenorrhea exhibiting provoked bladder pain (24/98, 24%) also reported higher pain during the screening rapid bladder test (P < .001), in response to transvaginal bladder palpation (P < .015), and on prospective daily diaries (P < .001) than women with dysmenorrhea without provoked bladder pain. Women experiencing moderate-to-severe dysmenorrhea also harbor a higher pain response to naturally evoked bladder distension. Noninvasive bladder provocation needs to be tested furtherlongitudinally in those with dysmenorrhea to characterize the course of visceral sensitivity and determine if it may help predict individuals at risk for developing subsequent pain in the bladder or elsewhere.
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