Selected article for: "bladder dysfunction and spinal cord"

Author: Böthig, Ralf; Kowald, Birgitt; Fiebag, Kai; Balzer, Oliver; Tiburtius, Christian; Thietje, Roland; Kadhum, Thura; Golka, Klaus
Title: Bladder management, severity of injury and period of latency: a descriptive study on 135 patients with spinal cord injury and bladder cancer
  • Cord-id: okobm9rq
  • Document date: 2021_6_17
  • ID: okobm9rq
    Snippet: STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal study. OBJECTIVES: To describe the severity of spinal cord injury/disease (SCI/D), type and management of neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction, tumor characteristics, and bladder cancer latency period in SCI/D patients. SETTING: Spinal cord injury centers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. METHODS: Data of SCI/D patients diagnosed with bladder cancer were collected between Jan 2012–Dec 2019 in the course of annual surveys in the neuro-urological departments
    Document: STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal study. OBJECTIVES: To describe the severity of spinal cord injury/disease (SCI/D), type and management of neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction, tumor characteristics, and bladder cancer latency period in SCI/D patients. SETTING: Spinal cord injury centers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. METHODS: Data of SCI/D patients diagnosed with bladder cancer were collected between Jan 2012–Dec 2019 in the course of annual surveys in the neuro-urological departments of all 28 centers. Demographic and paralysis-specific data, data on the type and management of neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction, and histopathological tumor characteristics were collected. RESULTS: Regarding histopathological tumor characteristics, no significant differences were found in 135 individuals with SCI/D when stratified for bladder management without chronic catheterization, SCI/D severity, and ASIA classification. The mean latency period between the onset of SCI/D and the diagnosis of bladder cancer was significantly longer in patients with catheter-free emptying methods compared to patients with intermittent catheterization, and in patients with LMNL (Lower Motor Neuron Lesion) compared to patients with UMNL (Upper Motor Neuron Lesion). CONCLUSIONS: Urinary bladder carcinomas are late events in the long-term course of SCI/D. Follow-up and approaches to screening must therefore be intensified with increasing duration of long-term SCI.

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