Time Burden of Bladder Management in Individuals With Spinal Cord Injury

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 83-91
Author(s):  
Kyla Nichole Velaer ◽  
Blayne Welk ◽  
David Ginsberg ◽  
Jeremy Myers ◽  
Kazuko Shem ◽  
...  

Background: While clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) is the gold standard for bladder management after spinal cord injury (SCI), many individuals with SCI, for reasons not fully understood, choose alternative bladder management. We hypothesized that CIC is associated with an increased time burden in individuals with SCI. Objectives: To investigate the time required to perform neurogenic bladder management in individuals with SCI. Methods: An electronic nonvalidated questionnaire was designed to determine the self-reported time spent performing bladder management. It was sent to participants in the Neurogenic Bladder Research Group SCI Registry, a national quality of life study of individuals with SCI. Results: Eighty-seven individuals responded to the survey. CIC was the most common bladder management (76%). Men and women performing independent CIC had similar average times with each catheterization episode (8.8 vs. 8.5 minutes, p = .864) as did women with a catheterizable stoma compared to women catheterizing per urethra (8.2 minutes, p = .913). Longer catheterization times were associated with cervical spine injury (mean 12.4 minutes per catheterization) and women requiring caregiver assistance (mean 20 minutes per catheterization). In addition, obese/overweight women had longer CIC times than normal weight women (14.5 minutes vs. 7 minutes; p = .036), while catheterization time was similar for all men regardless of body mass index. Individuals with indwelling catheters spent less than a third of the time on bladder management per day compared to those doing CIC (17 vs. 53 minutes per day, p < .001). Conclusion: Management of neurogenic bladder after SCI, especially in those performing CIC, is time consuming. This time burden may play a role in long-term bladder management decisions.

2019 ◽  
Vol 201 (Supplement 4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paholo Barboglio Romo* ◽  
Iryna Crescenze ◽  
Sara Lenherr ◽  
Jeremy Myers ◽  
Blayne Welk ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (10) ◽  
pp. 603-611
Author(s):  
Jung Hwan Kim ◽  
Jeong-Hwan Seo

Neurogenic bladder and bowel refers to the dysfunction of bladder and bowel caused by neurogenic etiology. Spinal cord injury is a major cause of this dysfunction, which seriously affects the injured person’s quality of life. The injury causes not only motor weakness of abdominal and perineal muscles, but also sensory changes and autonomic dysfunction of bladder and bowel. Spinal cord injuries involve multiple systems, and thus affect the normal functioning of the bowel and bladder in several ways: difficulty in urination and defecation, frequent or infrequent voiding, decrease of the sensation of fullness, incontinence, autonomic dysreflexia, perineal hygiene, deterioration of renal function, fecal impaction, psychological burden, etc. Thus, this review aims to provide updated practical guidance for the evaluation and management of neurogenic bowel and bladder by the clinicians who want to provide better care for their patients. Management of neurogenic bowel and bladder starts with carefully recording the patient’s history, including their bowel habits prior to the spinal injury. In general, evaluation of the neurogenic bladder requires more clinical tests than for the neurogenic bowel. The patients’ problems can be alleviated by adopting various measures: proper daily water and food intake, simultaneous pharmacologic treatments for the bowel and bladder, physiologic reflexes, bladder catheterization, rectal irrigation, surgical measures, etc. Priority should be given to the management of the neurogenic bladder with clean intermittent catheterization and decompression of the bladder pressure, and management of the neurogenic bowel by pharmacological treatment.


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