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Invasive procedures for overactive bladder in women

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

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Invasive procedures for overactive bladder in women

Management is undertaken via a specialist team.

Options include:

  • augmentation cystoplasty restricted for the management of idiopathic detrusor overactivity to women whose condition has not responded to non-surgical management and who are willing and able to self-catheterise

  • bladder wall injection with botulinum toxin type A1 to women with OAB caused by detrusor overactivity that has not responded to non-surgical management, including pharmacological treatments
    • risk of adverse effects, including an increased risk of urinary tract infection
    • start treatment only if the woman is willing, in the event of developing significant voiding dysfunction: to perform clean intermittent catheterisation on a regular basis for as long as needed or to accept a temporary indwelling catheter if she is unable to perform clean intermittent catheterisation.

  • percutaneous posterior tibial nerve stimulation
    • non-surgical management including OAB medicine treatment has not worked adequately and the woman does not want botulinum toxin type A1 or percutaneous sacral nerve stimulation

  • percutaneous sacral nerve stimulation

  • urinary diversion
    • considered for a woman with OAB only when non-surgical management has failed, and if botulinum toxin A1, percutaneous sacral nerve stimulation and augmentation cystoplasty are not appropriate or are unacceptable to her

Reference:


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