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Original Articles

DDAVP in the Urological Management of the Difficult Neurogenic Bladder in Spinal Cord Injury: Preliminary Report

, M.D. (Assistant Professor of Urology) , , M.D. (Instructor of Urology) & , M.D. (Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine)
Pages 165-167 | Received 07 Jul 1994, Accepted 17 Aug 1994, Published online: 02 Jun 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of desmopressin (DDAVP), a synthetic analogue of antidiuretic hormone, as an alternative therapy in the management of spinal cord injured (SCI) patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction unresponsive to conventional therapy. Seven SCI patients (three men and four women) were treated with DDAVP after urodynamic evaluation. Despite treatment with anticholinergic agents, urodynamic evaluation demonstrated uninhibited detrusor contractions exceeding 30 cm H2O pressure at less than 300 ml cystometric capacity in all seven patients. Three patients had been managed with intermittent self-catheterization, but had socially unacceptable short intervals between catheterizations. Two women with incomplete injury were afflicted with significant nocturia (>3 episodes/night). The remaining two patients managed with intermittent self-catheterization were troubled with nocturnal enuresis. The patients received 10 μg intranasal DDAVP once every 24 hours. Prior to DDAVP administration, the four patients who used DDAVP nightly experienced a median of four episodes of nocturia. After one month of DDAVP treatment, two patients had only one episode of nocturia per night and in the other two patients, nocturnal enuresis was completely eliminated. Three patients used daytime DDAVP administration at work to avoid frequent catheterization. The median period between bladder catheterizations increased from 2.5 hours before DDAVP to 6 hours while using DDAVP. Symptomatic improvement persisted during the follow-up period of 6–20 months (mean=12). Side effects were infrequent; only one patient complained of transient headaches. Neither hyponatremia nor serum electrolyte abnormalities occurred. Our preliminary results suggest that DDAVP is safe and effective in the symptomatic management of complicated neurogenic bladder dysfunction in selected SCI patients. (J Am Paraplegia Soc; 17: 165–167)

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