Abstract

BackgroundBladder distention is commonly used in diagnosis and treatment of interstitial cystitis (IC). Traditionally performed in the operating room under general or spinal anesthesia (GA), it is expensive and associated with short term morbidity. Office bladder distention using electromotive drug administration (EMDA) has been suggested as an alternative that is well tolerated by patients. We report the first comparative findings of patients undergoing both office distention with EMDA and distention in the operating room (OR) with GA.MethodsThis retrospective chart review identified 11 patients participating in two protocols of EMDA bladder distention who also underwent bladder distention under GA either prior to or after the EMDA procedure.ResultsThe median absolute difference in bladder capacity between GA and EMDA was only 25 cc; the median percent difference was 5%. Cystoscopic findings, while not prospectively compiled, appear to have been similar.ConclusionThis study represents the first comparison between distention with EMDA versus GA and confirms the technical feasibility of performing bladder distention in an office setting. The distention capacity achieved in the office was nearly identical to that in the OR and the cystoscopic findings very similar. Further investigation into the comparative morbidity, cost, and other outcome measures is warranted to define the ultimate role of EMDA bladder distention in the clinical evaluation and care of patients with IC.

Highlights

  • Bladder distention is commonly used in diagnosis and treatment of interstitial cystitis (IC)

  • We found that simple alkalinized lidocaine was completely inadequate for office bladder distention but that electromotive drug administration (EMDA) presented a promising technology

  • We found that the majority of subjects (64%) anesthetized with EMDA were able to tolerate a 60 cm H2O distention for the full 7 minutes, and we were able to obtain a median percent increase in distention capacity over cystometric capacity of 135%

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Summary

Introduction

Bladder distention is commonly used in diagnosis and treatment of interstitial cystitis (IC). Performed in the operating room under general or spinal anesthesia (GA), it is expensive and associated with short term morbidity. The procedure is typically performed in the operating room (OR) under spinal or general anesthesia (GA) and is associated with moderate short term morbidity such as pain and hematuria. Moving bladder distention into an office setting could potentially eliminate the inherent risks of anesthesia, lower the cost of the procedure, and minimize the recovery period. This could make a complete evaluation including bladder distention available to a broader spectrum of symptomatic patients and make re-treatment practical for the subset of patients who respond favorably

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