CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

Interstitial Cystitis

  • Guided imagery for women with interstitial cystitis: results of a prospective, randomized controlled pilot study.

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    Abstract Title:

    Guided imagery for women with interstitial cystitis: results of a prospective, randomized controlled pilot study.

    Abstract Source:

    J Altern Complement Med. 2008 Jan-Feb;14(1):53-60. PMID: 18199015

    Abstract Author(s):

    Donna J Carrico, Kenneth M Peters, Ananias C Diokno

    Article Affiliation:

    William Beaumont Hospital, Department of Urology, Royal Oak, MI 48073, USA. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    INTRODUCTION:In the United States, more than 1 million women and men are affected with interstitial cystititis (IC), which is a clinical syndrome involving urinary urgency, frequency, and pelvic pain. A review of the literature revealed that there are no studies showing the effect of guided imagery in women with IC. The purpose of this clinical investigation was to explore the effect of guided imagery on pelvic pain and urinary symptoms in women with IC symptoms.

    METHODOLOGY:Thirty (30) women with diagnosed IC were randomized into 2 equal groups. One group (treatment) listened to a 25-minute guided imagery compact disc (CD), that was created specifically for women with pelvic pain and IC, twice a day for 8 weeks. The control group rested for 25 minutes twice daily for 8 weeks. Because no guided imagery CDs specifically for women with IC were found on the commercial market, the authors created a script and recorded the CD specifically for women with IC and pelvic pain. The focus of this guided imagery CD was on healing the bladder, relaxing the pelvic-floor muscles, and quieting the nerves specifically involved in IC. Baseline and end-of-study assessment questionnaires (Interstitial Cystitis Symptom Index&Problem Index [IC-SIPI], IC Self-Efficacy Scale, a visual analogue [VAS] scale for pain, and a global response assessment [GRA]), 2-day voiding diaries, and 24-hour pain diaries were completed by the subjects and were evaluated using SPSS (Chicago, IL).

    RESULTS:More than 45% of the treatment group were responders to guided imagery therapy noting a moderate or marked improvement on the GRA. Pain scores and episodes of urgency significantly decreased in the treatment group. Responders had significant reductions in IC-SIPI scores (problem index, p = 0.006; symptom index, p = 0.004). In addition, responders on the GRA had significant (p = 0.039) improvements in mean pain scores from 5.50 to 2.57 at the end of the study in contrast to the nonresponders, whose pain levels remained the same (4.89 to 4.39).

    CONCLUSIONS:This is the first study providing preliminary data supporting the use of guided imagery as a potential therapy for IC. Guided imagery may be a useful tool to offer women with IC for pain and IC symptom management. It is an intervention without negative side-effects, is readily available, and shows a trend toward improvement of IC symptoms.

  • Hatha Yoga therapy management of urologic disorders.

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    Abstract Title:

    Hatha Yoga therapy management of urologic disorders.

    Abstract Source:

    World J Urol. 2002 Nov;20(5):306-9. Epub 2002 Oct 24. PMID: 12522587

    Abstract Author(s):

    Emmey Ripoll, Dawn Mahowald

    Abstract:

    Hatha Yoga (often referred to as "yoga") is an ancient type of physical and mental exercise that has been used as a therapeutic modality in traditional Indian medicine for centuries. Yoga as a complementary modality in western medicine is more recent and continues to grow. Chronic urologic disorders are often difficult to diagnose because their presentation mimic other medical conditions and are often a diagnosis of exclusion. Treatment is also frustrating because the more traditional treatments are often unsuccessful in managing chronic disorders. Health care practitioners are often forced to look elsewhere for other modalities to provide pain relief and improve quality of life. Hatha Yoga is one of these modalities which has been extremely useful to many patients in reducing the suffering seen with chronic urologic conditions such as: prostatodynia, chronic orchitis, chronic epididymitis, vulvodynia, interstitial cystitis, etc.

  • Hyperbaric oxygen for the treatment of interstitial cystitis: long-term results of a prospective pilot study.

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    Abstract Title:

    Hyperbaric oxygen for the treatment of interstitial cystitis: long-term results of a prospective pilot study.

    Abstract Source:

    Eur Urol. 2004 Jul;46(1):108-13. PMID: 15183555

    Abstract Author(s):

    Arndt van Ophoven, Gordon Rossbach, Frank Oberpenning, Lothar Hertle

    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE: We conducted a prospective pilot study to assess the safety and efficacy of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) for the treatment of interstitial cystitis (IC). METHODS: Six patients underwent 30 sessions of 100% oxygen inhalation in a hyperbaric chamber and were followed up over 15 months. The measures of efficacy were changes in pain and urgency (visual analog scales), alteration in the patient's assessment of overall change in his well-being (Patient Global Assessment Form), and changes in frequency and functional bladder capacity (48-hours voiding log). Evaluation of symptom severity regarding pain and voiding problems was done using the O'Leary-Sant index. RESULTS: Four patients rated the therapeutic result as either excellent or good and assessed their well-being after HBO treatment as improved. Two patients showed only short-term amelioration of some of their symptoms. At 12 months follow-up the baseline functional bladder capacity increased from 37-161 ml (range) to 160-200 ml in the responder group. The 24-hour voiding frequency decreased from 15-27 to 6-11 voids per day, a pain scale improvement from 20-97 mm at baseline to 3-30 mm at 12 months follow-up and an urgency scale improvement from 53-92 mm to 3-40 mm, respectively was observed at 12 month follow-up. The symptom and pain index score decreased from 23-35 at baseline to 3-17 at 12 months follow-up. CONCLUSION: HBO appears to be effective to treat IC patients. Treatment was well tolerated and resulted in a sustained decrease of pelvic pain and urgency, improvement of voiding patterns and increase of functional bladder capacity for at least 12 months. Copyright 2004 Elsevier B.V.

  • Randomized multicenter feasibility trial of myofascial physical therapy for the treatment of urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Randomized multicenter feasibility trial of myofascial physical therapy for the treatment of urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes.

    Abstract Source:

    J Urol. 2009 Aug;182(2):570-80. Epub 2009 Jun 17. PMID: 19535099

    Abstract Author(s):

    Mary P FitzGerald, Rodney U Anderson, Jeannette Potts, Christopher K Payne, Kenneth M Peters, J Quentin Clemens, Rhonda Kotarinos, Laura Fraser, Annemarie Cosby, Carole Fortman, Cynthia Neville, Suzanne Badillo, Lisa Odabachian, Andrea Sanfield, Betsy O'Dougherty, Rick Halle-Podell, Liyi Cen, Shannon Chuai, J Richard Landis, Keith Mickelberg, Ted Barrell, John W Kusek, Leroy M Nyberg,

    Abstract:

    PURPOSE: We determined the feasibility of conducting a randomized clinical trial designed to compare 2 methods of manual therapy (myofascial physical therapy and global therapeutic massage) in patients with urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited 48 subjects with chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome or interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome at 6 clinical centers. Eligible patients were randomized to myofascial physical therapy or global therapeutic massage and were scheduled to receive up to 10 weekly treatments of 1 hour each. Criteria to assess feasibility included adherence of therapists to prescribed therapeutic protocol as determined by records of treatment, adverse events during study treatment and rate of response to therapy as assessed by the patient global response assessment. Primary outcome analysis compared response rates between treatment arms using Mantel-Haenszel methods. RESULTS: There were 23 (49%) men and 24 (51%) women randomized during a 6-month period. Of the patients 24 (51%) were randomized to global therapeutic massage, 23 (49%) to myofascial physical therapy and 44 (94%) completed the study. Therapist adherence to the treatment protocols was excellent. The global response assessment response rate of 57% in the myofascial physical therapy group was significantly higher than the rate of 21% in the global therapeutic massage treatment group (p = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: We judged the feasibility of conducting a full-scale trial of physical therapy methods and the preliminary findings of a beneficial effect of myofascial physical therapy warrants further study.

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