| COMPARATIVE
ANALYSIS OF THE SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF CHILDREN WITH LOWER URINARY TRACT DYSFUNCTION
IN RELATION TO OBJECTIVE DATA
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UBIRAJARA BARROSO
JR, THIAGO NOVA, ANDERSON DULTRA, PATRICIA LORDELO, JUAREZ ANDRADE, ANTONIO
J. VINHAES
Section of
Urology, Federal University of Bahia, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil
ABSTRACT
Objectives:
To assess the clinical presentation of children with lower urinary tract
dysfunction (LUTD) relating to objective examination data.
Materials and Methods: Forty-four children
(36 girls and 8 boys with mean age of 6.8 years) with LUTD were prospectively
assessed through a specific questionnaire that analyzed clinical presentation
of those patients. These data were then compared to objective data, such
as micturition diary and uroflowmetry with electromyography.
Results: A urinary tract infection (UTI)
antecedent was observed in 31 cases (70.5%), and of those, 24 cases of
UTI were accompanied by fever. All children presented micturition urgency.
Daily urinary incontinence was observed in 33 cases (75%) and nocturnal
enuresis in 23 (52.3%). As for micturition frequency, 15 (34.1%) had normal
frequency 19 (43.2%) presented more than 10 daily micturition episodes
and 10 (22.7%) thought they urinated less than 5 times a day. In the uroflowmetry
and electromyography examination, 14 (31.8%) experienced lack of coordination
during micturition. Of 10 children with infrequent micturition, 5 confirmed
this in their micturition diaries and 2 listed more than 5 micturition
episodes per day in the diary. Of 19 patients presenting polaciuria, only
5 confirmed this in their micturition diaries, while 7 had less than 10
micturition episodes per day.
Conclusion: Most children with LUTD presented
a previous UTI, and daily incontinence was verified in around 75% of the
patients. Complaints of polaciuria or infrequent micturition are not noted
completely in the micturition diaries and there is no parameter in the
clinical history that offers good sensitivity or specificity for the diagnosis
of lack of perineal coordination.
Key
words: children; urination disorders; urinary tract infections;
neurogenic bladder
Int Braz J Urol. 2006; 32: 70-6
INTRODUCTION
Lower
urinary tract dysfunction (LUTD) is a clinical term related to urination
disorders that occur in children without neurological alterations. The
dysfunction is related to vesicoureteral reflux (present in 15 to 50%
of patients with vesical instability) (1,2) and urinary infection in children
is an important risk factor for renal scars and secondary arterial hypotension
(3-6).
The largest incidence occurs in children
between 3 and 7 years of age and is featured in girls at a rate of 9:1
compared to boys (7). It significantly affects the patient’s quality
of life, possibly leading to psychological and behavior alterations (8).
In children with nocturnal enuresis and urinary incontinence with low
self esteem, it has already been demonstrated that there is a normalization
of the general psychological picture with a successful treatment of incontinence
(9).
It is clinically presented with urination
urge and urge incontinence, with the possibility of other symptoms such
as polaciuria, infrequent urination and suprapubic or perineal pain.
In relation to urodynamic findings, LUTD
can be divided into 2 different groups (10). In the first group we observe
intense detrusor non-inhibited contractions during the bladder filling
phase that is opposed to pelvic floor muscle contractions and maneuvers
to retain the urine, such as the Vincent maneuver (11) and crossing the
legs. In the second group, there is incomplete relaxation of the sphincter
blocking urination and causing a prolonged or interrupted urinary stream.
The objective of the present study was to
prospectively assess the clinical presentation of children with LUTD,
correlating with objective data such as urinary diary and uroflowmetry
with electromyography and assessing the sensitivity and the specificity
of parameters of the clinical history in relation to the exams utilized.
To our knowledge, there are no available data in the literature that use
this type of correlation.
MATERIALS
AND METHODS
Forty-four
children with LUTD (36 girls and 8 boys, with a mean age of 6.8 years,
varying from 3 to 17 years) were retrospectively assessed by means of
a specific questionnaire that analyzed the clinical presentation of those
patients (Table-1). This questionnaire was applied jointly to parents
and children. The initial assessment protocol was composed of a clinical
symptoms questionnaire, simple abdomen radiography and a voiding cystourethrogram
(in the event of a history of urinary infection), uroflowmetry with electromyography
and ultrasonography of the urinary apparatus with a measure of residual
urine. The electromyography was performed together with the uroflowmetry,
with surface electrodes placed in the perineal and abdominal region to
also register the activity of the rectus abdominal during urination. With
this assessment, the child’s urodynamic is studied in a non-invasive
manner allowing us to correctly classify the LUTD. The performance of
the complete urodynamic study (invasive) remained restricted to the cases
where there was upper urinary tract dilation associated to or present
in those children with symptoms that were unreceptive to clinical treatment.
The symptomatology of patients was then compared to the findings in both
the urination diary and the uroflowmetry, as they are objective parameters.
The criteria of exclusion were neurological
alterations or clinical signals suggesting spina bifida occulta, such
as tufts of hair, lipomas and spots in sacral region, or anatomic alterations,
such as posterior urethral valve, ureterocele and ectopic ureter.
The statistical analysis was performed through
an assessment of the frequency symptoms related to the disease and the
sensitivity and specificity of the various forms of clinical presentation
and the complementary clinical exams used. The sensitivity and specificity
were calculated using the following formulas: number of patients with
a certain symptom divided by the number of children with sphincteric dysfunction,
and number of children without symptoms divided by the number of children
without sphincteric dysfunction.
RESULTS
Previous
urinary infection showed up in 31 cases (70.5%), with 24 (54.5%) presenting
episodes of UTI with fever. The distribution of the clinical presentation
frequencies is demonstrated in Table-2.
In terms of urinary frequency, 15 (34.1%)
had normal frequency, 19 (43.2%) voided more than 10 times a day and 10
(22.7%) patients thought they urinated less than 5 times a day. Correlating
clinical symptoms with objective data, we observed that of the 10 children
with infrequent urination, 5 confirmed this in their urination diaries.
Of the 19 patients claiming polaciuria, only 5 (26%) confirmed this in
the diary, while 7 (37%) urinated less than 10 times per day and 7 did
not fill out the diary. These figures are represented in Table-3.
The frequency of maneuvers to retard urination,
such as the Vincent maneuver and crossed legs, as well as constipation
frequency (characterized as more than 2 days without defecating) and encopresis,
are demonstrated in Table-2. The occurrence of occasional suprapubic region
pain and vaginal running are also registered in this Table.
Even though cystourethrogram was indicated
in all cases with urinary infection [31], only 23 children took it. A
presence of vesicoureteral reflux was verified in 3 patients (13%).
In the uroflowmetry assessment with electromyography,
14 patients (31.8%) experienced lack of coordination in micturition (Figure-1).
Only 5 patients were submitted to a complete urodynamic study. Sensitivity
and specificity of some parameters of the clinical history in relation
to the incoordination in micturition obtained by means of uroflowmetry
with electromyography were respectively: Vincent maneuver - 50% and 68%;
crossing the legs - 66% and 45%; urination difficulty - 41% and 71%; interrupted
stream - 25% and 63%; and constipation - 30% and 68%.
COMMENTS
Even
though the LUTD is well described in children, few prospective studies
have been accomplished and, to our knowledge, none have assessed the incidence
of the most frequent urinary claims. As well, we do not know if the symptoms
are well correlated to the objective data obtained from the urination
diary, the ultrasonography assessment of the residual urine and the uroflowmetry
with electromyography. LUTD in the child is a clinical condition that
predominantly affects girls. Hanna et al. have noted an incidence of 90%
in girls (7). In the present study, the larger prevalence in females is
confirmed (81.8%). The most affected age group was from 3 to 7 years of
age (7). In this study, the mean age was 6.8 years.
The relationship between LUTD and urinary
infection is of utmost importance in the follow-up of those children,
and it presents therapeutic and prognostic implications. Children with
vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) and LUTD have a larger chance of refractory
infection than those children without LUTD. Snodgrass found that children
with VUR and LUTD presented refractory infection in 44% of cases (12),
while those with only VUR had an incidence of 11%. A precedent urinary
infection was observed in 70.5% of children assessed in this study; of
those, 77.4% had already presented some episode of UTI with fever.
Among the symptoms associated with LUTD,
urgency and urge incontinence are the most prevalent. Urgency was observed
in all child studies, with reports of diurnal urinary incontinence found
in 75% of the cases. Nocturnal enuresis (52.3%) and urination difficult
(27.3%) were also frequent complaints. Giggle incontinence was a symptom
present in 23% of children with diurnal urination symptoms (13), having
been observed in 36.4% of children accessed in the present study. In an
analysis of 1421 children 5 to 15 years of age, Chandra et al. noticed
the presence of laugh urinary incontinence in 109 (7.7%) (13). Alterations
in urinary frequency were found in 66% of children. Among assessed patients,
43.2% reported that void more than 10 times a day, while 22.7% thought
that they urinated less than 5 times a day.
In the attempt to retain urine in the bladder,
the child tends to contract the pelvic muscles, sometimes assuming the
classic posture to achieve that (Vincent maneuver) (11), and crossing
the legs. Maneuvers to retain the urine in the bladder were observed in
at least half the children studied. Children with detrusor instability
that use postural maneuvers to retain urine have a higher incidence of
urinary tract infection than those who do not try to obstruct the urinary
flow (14).
It is already known that alterations in
intestinal habits have a great influence on the function of the low urinary
tract and can be associated with a syndrome that Koff et al. described
as elimination dysfunction (15). Among children studied, 27.3% claim constipation
and 4.5% presented encopresis. The association of LUTD in girls with some
degree of vaginal discharge was not found in the literature, but it was
observed in the current study in one third of the female cases. The hypothesis
is that there is a urine reflux in the vagina of the girls with LUTD,
which generates colpitis and vaginal discharge; however, there is a need
for more studies in this area in order to prove this correlation.
The association between urinary tract infection,
vesicoureteral reflux, LUTD and the formation of renal scars is already
well established. Data in the literature show the presence of VUR in 15
to 50% of patients with vesical instability (1,2). In children with LUTD
assessed per voiding cystourethrogram (VCU) in this study, the occurrence
of RVU was observed in 13% of the cases. Due to the improvement in reflux
with the clinical treatment of LUTD and the low incidence of RVU in this
group of patients (1,16), we should discuss the need to perform a VCU
in these cases. In cases of LUTD, a cystourethrogram can not only assesses
the presence of associated vesicoureteral reflux, but also demonstrates
the signals of vesical instability (spinning top urethra, serrulated bladder
wall, bladder elongation and, in extreme cases, presence of diverticula).
In analyzing 193 children with RVU, Barroso et al. found sings of vesical
instability in the cystourethrogram in 26% of the patients (17). These
findings demonstrated that among children that presented symptoms of LUTD,
64% had cystourethrogram. However, no study that came to our knowledge
assessed the prognostic value of these findings in this group of patients.
It is of utmost importance for the treatment
of children with LUTD that a differential diagnosis be performed regarding
the urge syndrome, urination dysfunction (sphincteric dysfunction) and
the lazy bladder syndrome. In order to make this differential diagnosis,
data alone from the patient’s clinical history are imprecise and
insufficient (18). The weak correlation between the symptomatology presented
by the patient and the objective results of complementary exams was confirmed
in this study. Of the 10 children reporting infrequent urination, half
confirmed this finding through their urination diaries. Of the 19 patients
with polaciuria, only 26.3% confirmed this in the diary. Sensitivities
and specificities of parameters from the clinical history in relation
to the objectives findings of voiding incoordination obtained through
uroflowmetry with electromyography were equally low. The discovery of
maneuvers to retain urine presented little correlation with the diagnosis
of lack of perineal coordination. As well as the report of urination difficulty
and the claim of interrupted stream, Vincent maneuvers (11) and crossing
the legs showed a weak correlation with the results obtained through the
non-invasive urodynamic assessment. Due to the low correlation between
the symptoms of LUTD and the results of the exams, the present study shows
that there is little correlation between LUTD symptoms and the assessment
through the urination diary and uroflowmetry with electromyography. This
suggests a need to perform a non-invasive urodynamic to classify children
with lower urinary tract dysfunction.
CONFLICT
OF INTERESTS
None
declared.
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____________________
Accepted after revision:
August 31, 2005
________________________
Correspondence address:
Dr. Ubirajara Barroso Jr.
Rua Alameda dos Antúrios, 212 / 602
Salvador, BA, 40280-620, Brazil
E-mail: ubarroso@uol.com.br |