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Botox injection for bladder problems

 

Botox injections used to reduce facial wrinkles can help treat bladder complaints, researchers have found.

The use of the botulism toxin has rapidly become one of the world's most popular forms of cosmetic surgery.

But researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have found that injections of the same toxin can help treat people who suffer from an overactive bladder.

Botox injections have shown promise as a treatment for a variety of problems with the lower urinary tract.

Professor Michael Chancellor, an expert in urology and gynaecology at the University of Pittsburgh, said: "Bladder dysfunction affects a staggering number of people worldwide.

"The use of botox injections can offer many of these patients a safe, but temporary, solution to this embarrassing problem."

In the study, 50 patients were injected with botox into the bladder or urethra.

The patients suffered from a variety of conditions, including multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury and stroke.

Incontinence

"The use of botox injections can offer many of these patients a safe, but temporary, solution to this embarrassing problem"
Professor Michael Chancellor

However, in each case they were suffering from involuntary contractions of the bladder muscle.

This either caused incontinence, or an inability to completely empty the bladder.

Forty-one of the 50 patients reported a decrease or absence of incontinence after the injections.

The improvement was seen within seven days of the injection and symptoms were alleviated for approximately six months. Botox is used for cosmetic surgery

None of the patients experienced long-term complications from the treatment.

Botox acts by binding to the nerve endings of muscles, blocking the release of the chemical that causes the muscle to contract.

When injected into specific muscles, the muscle becomes paralyzed or weakened, but leaves surrounding muscles unaffected, allowing for normal muscle function.

[American Urological Association]

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Last Revised at December 10, 2007 by Lusine Kazoyan, M.D.
 

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