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Professional Reference articles are designed for health professionals to use. They are written by UK doctors and based on research evidence, UK and European Guidelines. You may find the Urodynamic Tests article more useful, or one of our other health articles.

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Urodynamics is the study of the storage and evacuation of urine from the urinary tract. The aim is to reproduce the patient's symptoms and provide a pathophysiological explanation for them by identifying all factors that contribute to the lower urinary tract dysfunction, including those that are asymptomatic. There is a lack of evidence regarding when urodynamics should be used in the non-neurogenic bladder.[1]

Urodynamics consists of various tests, each of which is designed to assess a different aspect of lower urinary tract function. Urodynamic tests such as cystometry, uroflowmetry, pressure flow studies, electromyography and video-urodynamics tests provide objective information regarding the normal and abnormal function of the urinary tract and pelvic floor and, therefore, a better understanding of the cause of LUTS.

Urodynamic studies are particularly recommended if LUTS are persistent and suggest detrusor overactivity or sphincter incompetence.[2]

However, a Cochrane review of urodynamic studies for management of urinary incontinence in children and adults (2013) concluded that:[3]

  • While urodynamic tests did change clinical decision making, there was some evidence that this did not result in better outcomes in terms of a difference in urinary incontinence rates after treatment.
  • There was no evidence about their use in men, children, or people with neurological diseases.
  • Larger definitive trials are needed in which people are randomly allocated to management according to urodynamic findings or to management based on history and clinical examination to determine if performance of urodynamics results in higher continence rates after treatment.

A further Cochrane review into invasive urodynamic studies for the management of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in men with voiding dysfunction (2015) came to similar conclusions.[4]

Frequency volume charts (voiding diaries, bladder diaries and charts)

Information from a voiding diary can provide valuable additional information but should not be used in isolation.

  • Voiding diaries are often part of the initial evaluation of patients complaining of LUTS, especially those who have storage symptoms such as increased urinary frequency and urinary incontinence.
  • Voiding diaries are also known as micturition time charts, frequency/volume charts and bladder diaries.
  • Diaries provide an indication of the voiding pattern and the severity of symptoms.
  • It is recommended that a diary should be used between 3 and 7 days.

Diaries that have been defined by the International Continence Society (ICS) include:[6]

  • Micturition time chart: records only the times that voids occur with no data on volume.
  • Frequency/volume chart: records the time and volume of each micturition.
  • Bladder diary: records the time and volume of each micturition and may also include other data such as incontinence episodes, pad usage, fluid intake and urgency.

Findings may include:

  • Increased frequency and normal volumes - an increased 24-hour production of urine, suggesting a high fluid intake. This may be related to diabetes mellitus or diabetes insipidus but is more often habitual (psychogenic polydipsia).
  • Reduced volumes with minimal variation in the volume voided, suggesting bladder wall pathology such as carcinoma in situ or interstitial cystitis.
  • Reduced volumes with variation in the volume voided, suggesting underlying detrusor overactivity.
  • Increased nocturnal production. See separate Nocturia article.

Pad tests

  • A non-invasive objective method for detecting urinary incontinence. It may be useful to confirm the presence of incontinence when other tests have failed to demonstrate any urinary leakage.
  • The principal aim of the test is to determine the amount of urine lost during a specified period (eg, one hour), as the degree of incontinence is often unclear from the history.
  • The usefulness of pad tests in quantifying severity and predicting outcome of treatment is uncertain, although early postoperative testing may predict future continence in men after prostatectomy.
  • The trampoline pad stress test is simple to perform and has been shown to detect leakage in over 90% of women who did not leak during the jumping pad stress test.[7]

The need for an initial assessment of flow rate is sometimes disputed in primary care and the presence of a reduced flow rate can usually be gained by a thorough clinical history.

  • Uroflowmetry is useful in the assessment of voiding function for a wide range of urological conditions. Uroflowmetry is a non-invasive test that measures the rate of flow of voided urine.
  • It can often be used to suggest the presence of bladder outlet obstruction or a poorly functioning detrusor muscle.
  • Uroflowmetry is performed using a flow meter to measure the quantity of fluid voided per unit of time - expressed in millilitres per second (ml/s).
  • Patients are instructed to void normally, either sitting or standing, with a comfortably full bladder.
  • A flow rate based on a voided volume of under 150 ml is insufficient for reliable interpretation.
  • Men aged under 40 years generally have maximum flow rates over 25 ml/s. Flow rates decrease with age and men aged over 60 years, with no urinary obstruction, usually have maximum flow rates over 15 ml/s.

Post-void residual (PVR) volume is an important part of the assessment of patients with symptoms of voiding dysfunction or recurrent urinary tract infections, which may be due to incomplete bladder emptying.

  • It is important because it may worsen symptoms and, more rarely, may be associated with UTI, upper urinary tract dilatation and renal insufficiency.
  • Both bladder outlet obstruction and detrusor underactivity contribute to the development of PVR.
  • Portable ultrasound devices can be used to scan and calculate the volume of urine in the bladder (whether in urinary retention or after micturition).
  • The results of studies investigating the best method of measuring PVR have led to the consensus that ultrasound measurement of PVR is actually better than catheterisation.[8]
  • PVR volume should be measured in patients with urinary incontinence who have voiding symptoms. It should also be measured when assessing patients with complicated urinary incontinence.
  • PVR volume should be monitored in patients receiving treatments that may cause or worsen voiding dysfunction.
  • Simultaneous measurement of bladder pressure and flow rate allows the best assessment of the presence or absence of bladder outlet obstruction.
  • Cystometry provides information regarding the function of the lower urinary tract during both the storage and voiding phases of the bladder cycle and often supports a definitive diagnosis for LUTS.
  • Cystometry can help inform decisions about future management, including possible surgery for bladder outlet obstruction or detrusor overactivity, and neurological lower urinary tract dysfunction.
  • Multichannel cystometry may also help to characterise bladder compliance, sensation and capacity.

Leak point pressure

  • While the bladder is being filled during cystometry, it may suddenly contract and squeeze some water out without warning. The manometer records the pressure at the point when the leakage occurred.
  • The patient may also be asked to apply abdominal pressure to the bladder by coughing, shifting position, or trying a Valsalva manoeuvre. These actions help to evaluate the sphincter muscles.

Urethral pressure profilometry is also used to assess urethral function. It is highly accurate in diagnosis, grading and localisation of bladder outflow obstruction in men with voiding dysfunction.[9]

Pressure flow study

  • After cystometry, the patient is asked to empty the bladder. The catheter can measure the bladder pressures required to urinate and the flow rate that a given pressure generates.
  • This pressure flow study helps to identify bladder outlet obstruction that men may experience with prostate enlargement.
  • Bladder outlet obstruction is less common in women but may occur as a result of genitourinary prolapse or after a surgical procedure for urinary incontinence.

Ambulatory urodynamics may detect unexpected physiological variance from normal more often than conventional cystometry but the clinical relevance of this is uncertain. In practice it is not often undertaken.[2]

The ICS Urodynamics Committee recommends its use as a second-line diagnostic tool when office laboratory urodynamics have failed to achieve a diagnosis.[10]

  • Urine is initially passed into a special toilet which records the volume of urine passed and the urine flow rate.
  • An ultrasound scan can then check whether the bladder has been emptied.
  • Two fine tubes are then passed, one into the bladder to measure pressures within the bladder and one into the rectum to measure abdominal pressure.
  • An electronic continence pad is worn to record any leaks of urine.
  • The patient is then asked to get dressed, walk around and eat, drink and go to the toilet normally.
  • The test should be continued until the patient has passed urine on at least two occasions and the patient is asked to record when they passed urine and when they experienced any symptoms such as urgency (and what they were doing at the time).

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Further reading and references

  1. Baines G, Da Silva AS, Araklitis G, et al; Recent advances in urodynamics in women. F1000Res. 2020 Jun 159:F1000 Faculty Rev-606. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.24640.1. eCollection 2020.

  2. Guidelines on Urinary Incontinence in Adults; European Association of Urology (2020)

  3. Clement KD, Lapitan MC, Omar MI, et al; Urodynamic studies for management of urinary incontinence in children and adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Oct 292013(10):CD003195. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003195.pub3.

  4. Clement KD, Burden H, Warren K, et al; Invasive urodynamic studies for the management of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in men with voiding dysfunction. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Apr 28(4):CD011179. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011179.pub2.

  5. Lower urinary tract symptoms in men: assessment and management; NICE Guidelines (June 2015)

  6. Dynamic Testing; International Continence Society

  7. Rimstad L, Larsen ES, Schiotz HA, et al; Pad stress tests with increasing load for the diagnosis of stress urinary incontinence. Neurourol Urodyn. 2014 Sep33(7):1135-9. doi: 10.1002/nau.22460. Epub 2013 Jul 3.

  8. Jalbani IK, Ather MH; The accuracy of three-dimensional bladder ultrasonography in determining the residual urinary volume compared with conventional catheterisation. Arab J Urol. 2014 Sep12(3):209-13. doi: 10.1016/j.aju.2014.05.001. Epub 2014 Jul 29.

  9. Jain S, Agarwal MM, Mavuduru R, et al; Micturitional urethral pressure profilometry for the diagnosis, grading, and localization of bladder outlet obstruction in adult men: a comparison with pressure-flow study. Urology. 2014 Mar83(3):550-5. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2013.10.012. Epub 2013 Nov 22.

  10. Digesu GA, Gargasole C, Hendricken C, et al; ICS teaching module: Ambulatory urodynamic monitoring. Neurourol Urodyn. 2015 Nov 23. doi: 10.1002/nau.22933.

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