4.7 Review

Long-Term Surveillance and Management of Urological Complications in Chronic Spinal Cord-Injured Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11247307

Keywords

spinal cord injury; neurogenic bladder; bladder management; complications

Funding

  1. Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation
  2. [TCMF-CP 111-06]
  3. [TCMF-MP-110-03-01]

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Bladder dysfunction is a common complication after chronic spinal cord injury, which can lead to renal function loss, urinary tract infection, and other serious issues. Effective patient care and bladder management options are crucial for preserving renal function and improving clinical outcomes.
Bladder dysfunction is a common complication after chronic spinal cord injury (SCI). Patients may experience renal function loss, urinary tract infection (UTI), urolithiasis, bladder cancer, and even life-threatening events such as severe sepsis or renal failure. Suitable patient care may prevent UTI and urinary incontinence, decrease medication use, and preserve renal function. As the primary goal is to preserve renal function, management should be focused on facilitating bladder drainage, the avoidance of UTI, and the maintenance of a low intravesical pressure for continence and complete bladder emptying. Currently, several bladder management options are available to SCI patients: (1) reflex voiding; (2) clean intermittent catheterization; (3) indwelling catheterization. The target organ may be the bladder or the bladder outlet. The purposes of intervention include the following: (1) increasing bladder capacity and/or decreasing intravesical pressure; (2) increasing bladder outlet resistance; (3) decreasing bladder outlet resistance; (4) producing detrusor contractility; (5) urinary diversion. Different bladder management methods and interventions may have different results depending on the patient's lower urinary tract dysfunction. This review aims to report the current management options for long-term bladder dysfunction in chronic SCI patients. Furthermore, we summarize the most suitable care plans for improving the clinical outcome of SCI patients.

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