Treatment modalities for paediatric functional daytime lower urinary tract disorders: an updated review

Naveen Wijekoon,Aniruddh Deshpande

THERAPEUTIC ADVANCES IN UROLOGY(2024)

Cited 0|Views0
No score
Abstract
Paediatric functional bladder disorders especially those causing daytime symptoms are a common cause of significant psychosocial and/or physical morbidity and impaired quality of life. Despite the availability of many therapeutic modalities, a significant number of children appear to be refractory to treatment and continue to have symptoms. In this review, we aim to evaluate the current evidence in the use of existing and novel therapeutic options for the management of daytime lower urinary tract disorders in children. We also aim to highlight the controversies around the terminology and diagnosis of paediatric lower urinary tract dysfunction (LUTD) and specific conditions. The article will then provide a reasonable critique of the existing and emerging treatment modalities in functional daytime LUTD in children including their mode of action, efficacy, indications, and recent advances. These include standard urotherapy, specific urotherapy comprised of biofeedback, alarm therapy and electrical neural stimulation and pharmacotherapy involving selective and non-selective anticholinergics, ss3 adrenergic agonists, alpha blockers and botulinum toxin. A better understanding of this common clinical problem may help clinicians achieve better profiling of these children's diagnoses to further enable specific, targeted treatment. A review article about new treatment options for otherwise healthy children with long-term urinary symptoms occurring during the daytimeManagement of paediatric functional daytime LUT disorders is complex and may benefit from a combination of treatment modalities. Urotherapy and anticholinergics appear to be effective in the majority however, non-responders warrant careful re-evaluation to characterize the specific type of LUTD to target appropriate treatment. Various novel therapies and adjuncts have been shown effective and range from smartphone apps, bladder alarms, neuromodulation systems and more effective drug delivery systems. Despite being effective, non-selective antimuscarinics are less favoured for long-term use in children due to the side-effect profile. Therefore, more selective anticholinergics, ss3 agonists and combination treatment options are being evaluated to improve compliance while maintaining/enhancing treatment efficacy. Use of alpha blockers and intravesical injection of botulinum toxin have shown promising results especially in refractory cases.
More
Translated text
Key words
alpha blockers,anticholinergics,botulinum toxin,daytime urinary incontinence,functional lower urinary tract disorders,paediatric,urotherapy
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined