Abstract

The role of hydrodistension in the diagnosis of interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) is controversial. This study evaluated the effect of low-pressure hydrodistension on glomerulation formation in female patients diagnosed with the disease. Sixty female patients with the clinical diagnosis of IC/BPS and 30 female controls without the disease underwent cystoscopy and hydrodistension. Cold-cup biopsy was taken from bladder posterior wall at sites with normal cystoscopic appearance before hydrodistension in the IC/BPS group. The tissue samples were processed for histology study. Low-pressure (40 cmH2 O) hydrodistension for 2 min was performed and the appearance of glomerulations was compared between the two groups. High-pressure (80 cmH2 O) hydrodistension for 8 min was then performed as a therapeutic measure for the IC/BPS patients. Further changes to the degree of glomerulations were recorded. Histology showed pathological changes in the normal-appearing IC/BPS bladder mucosa including urothelium denudation, inflammatory cell infiltration, stromal edema, fibrosis, and vascular congestion. Low-pressure hydrodistension induced significant glomerulation formation in the patient group (percentage of patients with Grades 0-4: 0%, 8.3%, 40%, 35%, 10%, respectively) while none in the controls. High-pressure hydrodistension further increased the glomerulation grading in the IC/BPS patients. Structural changes are present in prehydrodistension IC/BPS bladder wall, which may not be macroscopically detectable. Hydrodistension at low pressure is adequate to disrupt the integrity of such diseased mucosa and offers a more discriminative test in the diagnosis of IC/BPS.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call