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MS and urinary tract problems. Why are they related?

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MS and urinary tract problems.

Why are they related?

(2)

”LoFric Sense is quick and easy to use,

discreet and reliable – that’s why it is our first choice here at the clinic.”

Learn about our experience at

LoFric.com ”LoFric Sense gave me back my

independence.

”I sleep better since starting with LoFric Sense,

and being a mom in the morning is easier too.” ”LoFric Sense is ver

y simple and practical

– I couldn’

t live without it!”

Clean Intermittent Catheterisation may reduce the risk of. • Dependence of toilet access at all times

Frequent visits to the toilet due to urge to void

Embarrassing urine leakage

Disturbed sleep due to toilet visits during the night

Urinary tract infections giving you pseudo- relapse

Spasticity due to a full bladder

In the long-run CIC may relive you of symptoms and giving you back your freedom and independence.

(3)

3

This brochure presents tips and ideas on how

you can minimize your urinary tract problems.

Table of contents

The aim of this brochure is to help you help yourself. You may be in a situation where you have recently been diagnosed with MS or have lived with the diag-nosis for several years. This brochure discusses some of the ways in which you can gain control over any bladder issues you may be experiencing.

As you may already know, MS affects the urinary system. The symptoms may come and go, but it is very important that you never ignore them, as this can aggravate them. If you experience problems, you should have them investigated as soon as possible. Otherwise, you may suffer from problems that don’t need to be problems. Not confronting these problems can at worst lead to long-term discomfort and hospitalizations.

This is precisely what we are going to concentrate on here. By being aware of these issues, you have the power to make your daily life easier. It also makes it easier for you to ask the right questions and maybe even make the right demands of your health care providers. In other words, we want to give you some valuable knowledge about your bladder. We hope that this will help you.

What is MS? ...4

How the urinary system works, when it works ...6

How might the urinary system work when you have MS? ...8

Where can I get help? ...10

How CIC may solve your problems ...12

What factors are important when choosing a catheter? ...14

Always seek help when you have symptoms in the urinary system. Here is some good advice to help you take control over your bladder ...16

Information, links and notes ...18

Problems with your urinary system? Use the questionnaire to find the cause ...20

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MS is a chronic disease that many people live with. Not all the negative things you’ve heard about MS are true. And only a few of the threatening scenarios actually come true.

But it is true that life changes for a person with MS. And there is still no cure for this disease. However, it can be treated and alleviated.

MS stands for Multiple Sclerosis. Roughly, the term means ”many scars”, and that is a pretty accurate description. These scars are formed when MS afflicts the central nervous system (the brain and the spinal cord) with inflammations. An attack of MS usually called just that, an attack. Months, even years, can pass between attacks, but the disease is usually stable during that time. MS may have different patterns and we are not sure what causes MS.

Normally, MS comes without warning. For example, you can suddenly ex-perience pain in one eye and blurred vision. After a few weeks, the problem has passed. Normal signs of MS are numbness, changes in sensitivity, pain, weakness, fatigue, poor balance and stiffness in your muscles. You can also experience problems with your memory, concentrating and learning new things.

In many aspects, MS is not a dangerous disease. MS is not contagious and it is not fatal. Most people who are diagnosed with MS are young adults bet-ween 20 and 40 years old.

Sometimes, urinary tract problems are the first symptom. The problems you can experience are, for example, quick and sudden urgings to urinate (known as urgings), an often recurring need to go to the toilet, leakage, problems urinating – even when you need to – and urinary tract infections. Which symptoms you experience depends entirely on which part of the nervous system the disease attacks and can vary between attacks. When you talk to your physician, don’t forget to describe all of your symptoms, even if they concern the urinary system.

What is MS?

Nerve cell with the axon wrapped in myelin. An inflammatory attack leads to a reduction of the nerve’s ability to transmit impulses.

MS is a chronic, inflammatory disease that affects the central nervous system.

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Find out more about MS and the urinary tract

on LoFric.com

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Your kidneys produce urine by filtering and removing waste from the blood. The urine then flows down to your bladder, which acts as a reservoir. The bladder itself is actually a big muscle that can expand and contract. When it contracts, the urine is pressed out into the urethra, but first it has to pass the sphincter muscle. This muscle is located below the bladder and functions as a safety valve that is either open or closed. When it is open, the urine can flow out and down into the toilet.

A healthy person usually urinates 5–7 times per day. This is dependent on how much you eat and drink, of course. A healthy bladder can hold about 500 ml of urine. Normally, you drink about 1.5 litres of liquid per day.

How the urinary system works, when it works.

Urine transports waste products from the kidneys and out of your body.

Kidney

Bladder

Smooth muscle sphincter

Pelvic floor muscles

Renal pelvis

Ureter

Ureter outlet

External sphincter

Urethra

Bladder muscle

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7

The brain and the bladder are connected

As the image shows, your brain and your bladder are connected in an ingenious system. The brain contains two centres that collaborate. Receptors in the bladder signals to the spinal cord that the bladder is starting to fill up. The spinal cord then sends signals to the micturation centres in your brain, that you are beginning to feel a need to urinate. In this case, you can still choose when you want to empty your bladder. The brain can ignore these signals for a while, until the signals become so strong that you are forced to empty your bladder. When you (finally) find a toilet, your brain sends a signal to the bladder’s sacral reflex centre to contract the bladder and relaxe the sphincter muscle. This allows the urine to flow out through the urethra.

Cerebral Micturition Centre

Pontine Micturition Centre

Spinal Cord

Sacral Reflex Centre

Pelvic nerve

Pudendal nerve

Hypogastric nerve

Bladder

Pelvic floor

Sphincter

Urethra

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How might the urinary system work

when you have MS?

A common problem is that you need to go to the toilet very often, and you might not reach it in time.

Basically, your urinary tract problems in MS can be divided into three groups:

a) urgings, with or without leakage (incontinence)

A condition where an overactive bladder makes you feel the need to urinate very often, but only small amounts each time. Can cause leakage by involuntary contractions.

b) difficulty emptying your bladder completely (retention), possibly in combination with urgings

Caused by uncoordinated muscle functions. The sphincter muscle does not relax when the bladder contracts, so urine flow is weak and intermit-tent. Can lead to leakage, urinary tract infections or (in the worst cases) kidney problems.

c) problems emptying your bladder that can lead to urine leakage

A more uncommon aspect is disruptions in the lower part of the spinal cord. The bladder and sphincter muscles are weakened, which can lead to a mixture of problems called overflow incontinence.

The spinal cord and the brain play an important role in urinary system pro-blems when you have MS. When the nerve is damaged, transmission of signals between the brain and the part of the spinal cord that controls the urinary system becomes more difficult. This leads to problems with your urinary system, and this happens to most people with MS. Your bowels are also controlled by the same neural paths as your urinary system, which means that they can also be affected. If you become constipated, it can affect your ability to empty your bladder or lead to urgings.

It is important to remember that MS is not necessarily the cause of bladder problems; they can also be caused by for instance an enlarged prostate or stress incontinence.

Urinary tract infections (UTIs)

When you have problems emptying your bladder, you are at greater risk of contracting urinary tract infections. Bacteria thrive in the urine that is not emptied.

Make sure to pay attention when you suffer the first symptoms of a urinary tract infection. Contact your physician or specialist as soon as possible in order to avoid the infection becoming unnecessarily lengthy.

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9

These are the most common symptoms of UTI:

• The need to urinate often, in other words frequent urgings. • A burning feeling when you empty your bladder.

• Diffuse pain in your lower abdomen and back. • Fever.

• Discoloured and badly smelling urine.

Common treatment options often in combination:

• Medication that for example alleviates an overactive bladder. • Clean Intermittent self-Catheterisation (CIC). Complete emptying

of your bladder using a catheter.

• Use of incontinence protection and/or a uridom. • Bladder or pelvic floor training. See tips on page 16.

MS could interfere with your muscle coordination, making it necessary for you to use a catheter.

These treatments are usually used in the initial phase. If none of these treat-ments is satisfactory, there are several other alternative treattreat-ments. For example different kinds of surgery.

A urinary tract infection with fever can lead to what is known as a pseudo-attack. It can mean a deterioration of your MS condition, but one that is not permanent. For example, your bladder emptying problems can be aggrava-ted, which in turn can lead to new urinary tract infections.

Your health care service can tailor a form of treatment to your specific problems. As a first alternative, this can mean a combination of medication and catheterisation. Since MS is a changing condition, other forms of treatment alternatives can be considered in the long term.

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Problems with your urinary system is something that you as a person with MS may have to live with your entire life. The symptoms may come and go, but it is important that you never ignore them, as this can aggravate them.

A positive point is that we have been able to drastically decrease the number of urinary system-related diseases, thanks to constantly improving diagnostic methods and follow-up analysis.

In order to establish which treatment best fits your needs, you will need to undergo an examination. A physician or some other kind of specialist can make the proper diagnosis for your urinary tract problems. Ask your health care provider about which specialists you can speak to in order to determine your problems and needs.

What happens during the first examination?

At your first examination, your specialist nurse or physician will gather infor-mation about how your urinary tract problems affects you. You will leave a urine sample and undergo an ultrasound to see if your bladder is completely empty after urinating. It is important to determine if you are able to completely empty your bladder.

Your specialist nurse will also ask you to fill out a ”bladder diary” (see page 22) to see how often, how much and when you urinate. Your bladder diary is a valuable tool. It helps establish a clearer picture of your problems.

This first examination becomes a good foundation to determine if you need to be further examined at a specialist clinic, for example by a urologist or a gynaecologist.

What can I do?

Your most important contribution is to be alert to any changes in your blad-der emptying pattern and to inform your nurse/physician about the change. Based on this, your nurse or physician can determine the most appropriate treatment for you.

Where can I get help?

Talk to your MS-doctor – there are many ways to improve your quality of life.

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Clean intermittent self-catheterisation (CIC) is a technique for bladder emptying when you have difficulties doing it the normal way. This is different from a permanent catheter for continuous urine drainage. Treatment with a permanent catheter is something you should avoid, as it causes complications such as urinary tract infections, which in turn cause urgings, bladder stones and, in the worst case, infections that can require hospitalization.

This is how it works

CIC involves periodically passing a small tube (called a catheter) into the bladder to allow all of the urine to flow out. This helps to completely empty the bladder when needed. Normally, you use a catheter about five times per day, which is as often as you otherwise would urinate without a catheter. Once the bladder is emptied the catheter is removed from the body. Although it can seem quite strange at first, most people find learning to catheterise very easy. Many people with limited mobility or hand dexterity perform CIC regularly. With some practice it only takes a few minutes. The only difference from living a normal life is that you use a catheter when you empty your blad-der.

You will avoid accidental leakage

Intermittent self-catheterisation is a good strategy for people with MS. Since the bladder often won’t empty completely with voluntary urination, it is a good way to avoid leaking and urinary tract infections.

You can avoid “living” on the toilet. Many people with MS don’t dare to leave home due to sudden urgings and frequency with leakage problems. By combining medical treatment and CIC, you can alleviate this problem. Medication decreases your bladder activity and CIC ensures that the bladder is emptied completely.

You will decrease the risk of urinary tract infections (UTI)

People with MS can get really sick when they contract a UTI. By completely emptying your bladder, you reduce that risk.

You can influence the spasticity

Stiffness and muscle spasms can become worse if your bladder is full or if you have a urinary tract infection.

You will sleep better

Needing to frequently go to the toilet at night has a negative impact on your ability to be active the next day. Catheterise your bladder before you go to bed; that way, you will sleep better and prevent nighttime leakage.

How CIC may solve your problems.

For detailed instructions on perfor-ming CIC, please ask for our User guide.

CIC may reduce risk of: * Urgings

* Frequency * Leakage

* Night time voiding

* Incomplete bladder emptying * Urinary Tract Infection * Damaged kidneys

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13

Reduce your fatigue

Constantly needing to worry about leakage or frequently having to go to the toilet is tiring. By reducing the number of times you need to urinate during the day and night, might give the chance to regain control over your bladder. In that way CIC can help you reduce your fatigue.

What about sex?

CIC should have a positive impact on your sex life. You’ll be able to main-tain a sexual relationship without worrying about embarrassing leakage or discomfort.

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How to try out catheters for clean intermittent catheterisation

When trying out catheters, it is important to get help from a health care professional. Your catheter must be the right length and diameter. You should also make sure you get a catheter that is documented to be safe and gentle to use. A common myth is that all catheters approved for use in health care are equally good. In reality, this approval often means that the catheter of-fered only meets minimum standards.

Use a catheter that is gentle to both insert and remove

Hydrophilic catheters are the most gentle to your body. This is because they have a surface that attracts water. The result is a very wet and slippery sur-face, which greatly reduces friction against your urethra. But all hydrophilic catheters are not equally good. Make sure you use one that is just as gentle to remove as it is to insert.

Think long-term

To avoid complications, you should make sure that the catheter’s health implications in long-term use are well documented. That is your guarantee for a successful and complete emptying of the bladder as well as for long term optimal urological health. Therefore, it is not enough to test different catheters for just a few days to say which ones are the best for you in the long term.

Over 25 years experience

LoFric® is a catheter brand that has been on the market for over 25 years.

Today, it is the market’s most well documented catheter. Studies have shown how well LoFric works in long-term use. Today, LoFric is the only hydrophilic catheter that can display documented reduced long-term risk of complica-tions.

What factors are important when choosing

a catheter?

Do you need to use a catheter some-times? Make sure it’s a LoFric.

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Six reasons to choose LoFric before other catheters

1. LoFric is a low-friction hydrophilic catheter with a unique coating, designed to reduce friction during catheterisation.

2. LoFric is the world’s only catheter with Urotonic

Surface Technology. This means that once it is wet, the unique surface retains water throughout the entire catheterisation process.

3. LoFric is proven to reduce the risk of pain, damage to the

urethra and other complications associated with long-term use.

4. LoFric is the most tried, tested and documented hydrophilic

catheter and the only one with independent long-term clinical evidence to support its use.

5. LoFric offers the widest choice of catheter types, sizes and kits to meet all user needs.

6. LoFric is developed in close cooperation with users and offers flex-ible opening options, allowing you to choose a way that suits

you best. Our extensive user guide (included with your first prescription) will help you more.

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• If you have problems with your urinary system, drinking less so that you urinate less often is not a good idea. Your kidneys and bladder need to be exercised in order to work properly. Also, your urine will have a higher concentration of waste products, which leads to an increased risk of infection.

• A good general rule is to drink about two litres of fluids a day. Some people choose to drink less in the evening in order to avoid nighttime visits to the toilet.

• Drinking something that increases the acidity of your urine, for example cranberry juice, can help to prevent infections.

• When emptying your bladder with a catheter, make sure you empty it completely and often enough.

• Taking trips is no obstacle, not even when you use a catheter. If the travel time is long and you are unsure about access to a toilet, you can use a catheter with a collection bag for your urine. If you are uncertain of the water quality use bottled water. By avoiding foreign bacteria, you reduce the risk of urinary tract infections.

• Bladder training is a method to gradually get your bladder used to increa-sing quantities of urine. Talk to your physician, nurse or urotherapist if you want to get started with this.

• Pinch exercises can help women to strengthen their pelvic muscles. These pinch exercises increase your ability to keep urgings at bay until you reach a toilet.

• Your urine production increases when you drink alcohol and coffee. This means that you also need to urinate more often. If this is a problem, try drinking something else.

• Limit your use of soap on your genital area since that can be a way to prevent urinary tract infections. Soap can dry out your skin and make it more susceptible to bacteria attacks.

• Avoid wearing tight clothing that puts pressure on your bladder.

• Constipation is common for people with MS. Eat a fibre-rich diet with fruit, raw vegetables and whole-grain bread. Try to exercise, and drink plenty of water. Also, consult your physician – the constipation could be a side-effect of your medication.

Always seek help when you have symptoms in

the urinary system. Here is some good advice

to help you take control over your bladder.

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17

Always seek help when you have symptoms in

the urinary system. Here is some good advice

to help you take control over your bladder.

(18)

www.lofric.com

www.msif.org

www.ms-in-europe.org

www.nationalmssociety.org

www.mssociety.org.uk

Information and links.

Testimonials.

“At first I felt that CIC using LoFric sounded horrible. But it was surprisingly easy to learn and the catheter is so soft and slippery when it has soaked in water that I can barely feel it.”

Benny “I used to suffer UTI’s several times a year. I simply couldn’t empty my bladder properly. But since I started using CIC therapy, I rarely suffer UTI’s and I feel much better in every way. I seldom suffer urine leakage and I also feel that my MS is more stable than it was before.”

Charlotte “My urologist informed me that due to MS, I had an overactive bladder. I was prescribed medication to control it, but after a few years it got worse. The problem was I always had some urine left in my bladder, even after urinating, which led to urinary tract infections. But with LoFric catheters, I can empty my bladder com-pletely. Both my UTI’s and urine leakage have decreased conside-rably. And I feel as good as I did before.”

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19

Notes.

(20)

Problems with your urinary system?

Use the questionnaire to find the cause.

How do I know what to report to my physician or nurse? What is normal? What is not normal? We’ve put together a questionnaire that will help you get started. Sometimes, it can be difficult to determine if a bladder-emptying pattern is normal or not, which is why an individual evaluation must be made.

Fill this in and bring it to your doctor or nurse. This will make it easier for them to find the cause of your problems and give you the right help.

1. How many times during the day do you urinate?

1-6 times 7-10 times More than 10 times

2. How many times do you wake up at night because you need to urinate?

None Once Twice More

3. How often do you experience urine leakage?

Never Once per week or less 2-3 times per week Once per day Several times per day

4. Do you experience urine leakage during physical activity, for example at work or during exercise, when you run, cough or sneeze?

No Yes

5. Do you experience urine leakage when you feel an urge, and don’t make it to the toilet in time?

No Yes

6. Do you experience urine leakage when sleeping?

No Yes

7. Can you, by pinching, stop your urine from leaking?

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21 10. Do you normally experience interruptions in your urine flow while urinating?

Never Yes, sometimes

Yes, most of the time

11. Have you had a urinary tract infection in the past 12 months?

No Yes, 1-2 times

Yes, 3 times or more

8. Do you use sanitary napkins or pads?

Never Yes, sometimes

Yes, most of the time Yes, always

9. Do you ever reach the toilet after feeling an urge, and find you have problems to start urinating?

Never Yes, sometimes

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When you visit your doctor or urologist he/she will ask you to fill in a blad-der diary. This is a form that helps to map how your urinary sytem functions over time. You will be asked to fill it in both day and night during a few days. You might be asked how much you have had to drink so it would be a good idea to keep track. The results are a great help in establishing a diagnosis.

Bladder diary.

06.00 07.00 08.00 09.00 10.00 11.00 12.00 13.00 14.00 15.00 16.00 17.00 18.00 19.00 20.00 21.00 22.00 23.00 24.00 01.00 02.00 03.00 04.00 05.00 Total Average wc wc wc wc wc wc wc

Time Fluid intake

(ml/cc) volume Voided (ml/cc) Catheterised volume (ml/ cc) Drip

(X) Wet (X) Changed pads

(X)

Sudden urge

(X) Notations

wc wc

How to fill in the chart

Fluid intake references

Glass of wine – 180 ml/cc Bottle of drink – 330 ml/cc One cup –150 ml/cc Glass of water

–150 ml/cc – 200 ml/ccLarge cup Large beer/drink – 500 ml/cc

wc • Please fill in

approxi-mately when and how much fluid you drink (in ml/cc). See fluid intake references below.

• Please fill in the time and the amount (in ml/cc) of urine passed, voided and/or catherised.

• Under notations you can add infor-mation such as if you experienced leakage when sneezing, leakage because the toilet was occupied and so on.

• If you experienced ac-cidental loss of urine please mark with an X – the type of acci-dent you had accord-ing to the pictogram (drip or wet).

• Changed pad – mark with an X.

• Experience a sud-den urge to pass water – mark with an X.

(23)

06.00 07.00 08.00 09.00 10.00 11.00 12.00 13.00 14.00 15.00 16.00 17.00 18.00 19.00 20.00 21.00 22.00 23.00 24.00 01.00 02.00 03.00 04.00 05.00 Total Average wc wc wc wc wc wc wc Time

Date:

Day 1

Fluid intake (ml/cc) Voided volume (ml/cc) before catheterisation Catheterised volume (ml/cc) Drip (X) We t (X) Changed pads (X) Sudden urge (X) Notations wc wc
(24)

Wellspect HealthCare, Aminogatan 1, P.O. Box 14, SE-431 21 Mölndal, Sweden.

“When I was diagnosed with MS, I’d had bladder problems for several years. I was put on medication that helped a little bit, but at times I still perceived the bladder problems

as my biggest handicap. It took a while to find the right catheter for me, but I can’ t tell

you how glad I am that I didn’

t give up. T

oday I use LoFric Sense several times a day ,

and it’s hard to describe how wonder

ful it feels to be able to live nor

mally again – go

-ing to the shops, or the movies or just hang-ing out with friends without hav-ing to worr y.

It sounds cheesy

, but... it really has changed my life!”

Krista © 2012 W ellspect HealthCare, a DENTSPL Y Inter national Company . All rights reser ved. 77866-GBX-1206

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