Archive for October 9, 2008

Pepperoni Pizza And Pelvic Pain

Article Date: 14 Sep 2008

What’s the worst that could happen after eating a slice of pepperoni pizza? A little heartburn, for most people.

But for up to a million women in the U.S., enjoying that piece of pizza has painful consequences. They have a chronic bladder condition that causes pelvic pain. Spicy food — as well as citrus, caffeine, tomatoes and alcohol — can cause a flare in their symptoms and intensify the pain. Researchers had long believed the spike in their symptoms was triggered when digesting the foods produced chemicals in the urine that irritated the bladder.

A surprising new discovery from Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine reveals the symptoms — pain and an urgent need to frequently urinate — are actually being provoked by a surprise perpetrator. It’s the colon, irritated by the spicy food, that’s responsible. The finding provides an explanation for how the body actually “hears” pelvic pain.

The discovery also opens up new treatment possibilities for “painful bladder syndrome,” or interstitial cystitis, a condition that primarily affects women (only 10 percent of sufferers are men.) During a flare up, the pelvic pain is so intense some women inject anesthetic lidocaine directly into their bladders to get relief. Patients typically also feel an urgent need to urinate up to 50 times a day and are afraid to leave their homes in case they can’t find a bathroom.

“This disease has a devastating effect on people’s lives,” said David Klumpp, principal investigator and assistant professor of urology at the Feinberg School. “It affects people’s relationships with family and friends.” Klumpp said some women who suffer from this become so depressed, they attempt suicide.

Klumpp conducted the study with postdoctoral fellow Charles Rudick. The paper is published in the September issue of Nature Clinical Practice Urology.

The Northwestern researchers discovered the colon’s central role in the pain is caused by the wiring of pelvic organ nerves. Nerves from this region — the bladder, colon and prostate — are bunched together like telephone wires and plug into the same region of the spinal cord near the tailbone.

People with interstitial cystitis have bladder nerves that are constantly transmitting pain signals to the spinal cord: a steady beep, beep, beep.

But when the colon is irritated by pepperoni pizza or another type of food, colon nerves also send a pain signal to the same area on the spinal chord. This new signal is the tipping point. It ratchets up the pain message to a chorus of BEEPEEPBEEPBEEP!

“It was known that there was cross talk between organs, but until now no one had applied the idea to how pain signals affect this real world disease, how the convergence of these two information streams could make these bladder symptoms worse,” said Klumpp, who also is an assistant professor of microbiology-immunology at the Feinberg School.

The findings suggest the bladder pain can be treated rectally with an anesthetic in a suppository or gel. Another possibility is an anesthetic patch applied to pelvic skin. Studies in back pain show anesthetic patches applied to the skin can reduce back pain, Klumpp said.

“We imagine a similar kind of patch might be used to relieve pelvic pain, which might be the best solution of all,” he noted.

HOW THEY “CAUGHT” THE COLON

For the study, Klumpp and Rudnick created a model of a mouse that mimicked an inflamed bladder with pelvic pain. Then they injected lidocaine into the bladder. The pain vanished. Next they injected lidocaine into the uterus. There was no diminishment of the pain. Lastly, they tried lidocaine in the colon.

“In the colon it knocked down pain just as effectively as if we put it in the bladder. We thought if the colon can suppress bladder-associated pain, maybe it can make it worse in the way that foods irritate bladder symptoms,” Klumpp explained.

So, Klumpp injected a small dose of red pepper into the colon of a normal mouse. The injection didn’t provoke any pain. But then he injected a small dose into a mouse with pelvic pain. The pelvic pain worsened.

“We likened it to what happens to humans,” Klumpp said. “Pepperoni pizza does nothing to most people other than heartburn, but when you give it to a person with an inflamed bladder, that will cause their symptoms to flare because the nerves from the bladder and bowel are converging on the same part of the spinal cord.”

MEASURING PELVIC PAIN IN A MOUSE

When pain emanates from a visceral organ, the pain message is delivered to the spinal cord and bounces out to the corresponding skin surface, called the dermatome. To measure pelvic pain in the mice, Kumpp prodded their pelvic skin with nylon filaments of varying thickness and stiffness, beginning with one that was as thin as a human hair. The more pelvic pain the mouse was experiencing, the more sensitive its pelvic skin to even the finest filament.

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Exploring The Roles Of The Pituitary Gland And Sympathetic Nervous System In The Inflammatory Process

Exploring The Roles Of The Pituitary Gland And Sympathetic Nervous System In The Inflammatory Process

29 Sep 2008   

University of Iowa researchers are ready to find the causes of interstitial cystitis, thanks to a five-year, $4.8 million grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health. The grant is the largest ever received by the University of Iowa Department of Urology.

Interstitial cystitis is a painful bladder condition that causes excessively frequent urination and associated pain. An estimated 1.3 million Americans have the condition, more than one million of them women, according to an NIH report published in 2007.

“Some people with interstitial cystitis can’t work because their symptoms are so severe. The condition has been difficult to treat because we don’t know the causes,” said the grant’s principal investigator Karl Kreder, M.D., professor of urology at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine.

“This NIH grant will allow us to explore inflammatory factors in the bladder and, as some recent evidence suggests, whether interstitial cystitis is a total body condition,” said Kreder, who also is director of urodynamics, female and reconstructive urology in the Department of Urology at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.

The funding makes the UI a “Discovery Site” for the NIH’s Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Chronic Pelvic Pain Research Network. In particular, the UI researchers will explore the roles of the pituitary gland and sympathetic nervous system in the inflammatory process. Kreder said the project involves five different, but interrelated, projects and will draw on the UI’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Science.

One project, led by Susan Lutgendorf, Ph.D., professor of psychology in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, examines the hypothalamic pituitary-adrenal axis, which helps regulate temperature, the immune system, mood, sexuality, and energy, as well as reactions to stress and injury.

A second project examining brain pathways that may govern painful syndromes is led by Satish Rao, M.D., Ph.D., UI professor of internal medicine.

Catherine Bradley, M.D., UI associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology, leads a third project that is focused on the epidemiology of interstitial cystitis and categorizes it by pain mapping.

The research is rounded out by two basic sciences projects — one to develop animal models that mimic the disorder, led by Yi Luo, Ph.D., UI assistant professor of urology, and one, led by Michael O’Donnell, M.D., UI professor of urology, that examines how certain bladder factors may predispose a person to interstitial cystitis.

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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.

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Depression, Abuse and its Relationship to Interstitial Cystitis

Depression, Abuse and its Relationship to Interstitial Cystitis

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  Keywords
INTERSTITIAL CYSTITIS, IC, BLADDER PAIN, PELVIC PAIN, SEXUAL ABUSE, DEPRESSION

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Screening for depression and abuse recommended for female patients with BPS.

 
 
 

 

Newswise — Depression is a common condition with point prevalence among women between 5% and 9%. The relationship between depression and chronic pain has been well studied. Up to 66% of patients with depression have reported chronic pain. Whether depression precedes chronic pain or follows from it is still not well understood. Physical and sexual abuse against women and children is a common condition and affects up to 40% of women in some studies.

H.B. Goldstein and associates from Voorhess, New Jersey and Philadelphia evaluated the prevalence of depression, sexual abuse, and physical abuse among women diagnosed with interstitial cystitis. One hundred forty-one subjects completed the validated Beck’s Depression Inventory II questionnaire and the validated Drossman Abuse questionnaire. Sixty-nine per-cent of subjects scored 14 or higher on the depression questionnaire corresponding to a clinical diagnosis of depression. The mean score of the sample was 14.6, representing moderate depression. Of those that scored in the depression range (>14), the mean score was 22.4, in the moderate depression range. The US prevalence in the general population is 9% for depression. Childhood sexual abuse and physical abuse in BPS showed no difference from general population. However, the prevalence of sexual abuse from the validated questionnaires was 36%, significantly higher than general population estimates of 15%-25%.

The authors note that the scope of their study does not entail aspects that would be necessary to prove a causal relationship of their findings, nor did they include a contemporaneous control group. Nevertheless, the findings are very intriguing, and the authors suggest that all women, whether they have BPS or not, should be screened for abuse and depression, and those that screen positive should be referred for professional help.

Goldstein HB, Safaeian P, Garrod K, Finamore PS, Kellogg-Spadt S, Whitmore KE

Written by UroToday.com Contributing Editor Philip M. Hanno, MD, MPH

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