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Make Discussing Exercise in Pregnancy a Priority : Ample evidence shows that regular, moderate exercise in healthy pregnancies has no adverse effects.
Although exercise is promoted to the general population for its well-recognized benefits, it is still not adequately accepted or recommended during pregnancy, according to Raul Artal, M.D., professor and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women's health at St. Louis University.
The hesitance of physicians to recommend exercise to pregnant women is rooted in old-fashioned notions of pregnancy as a time of confinement, he said.
With evidence to show that regular, moderate exercise in women with healthy pregnancies results in no adverse maternal or fetal effects, it could be argued that, in the spirit of “primum non nocere,” physicians should make exercise recommendations a priority, said Dr. Artal, a noted expert in exercise physiology in pregnancy.
Because it is recognized that habits adopted during pregnancy can result in persistent lifestyle improvements, the promotion of exercise during pregnancy is an important public health issue that could significantly reduce the lifetime risks of obesity, chronic hypertension, and diabetes—not only for pregnant women, but also but for their families, he said.
Dr. Artal's pregnancy exercise recommendations include:
Healthy Pregnancy? Few Restrictions
Women with healthy pregnancies and no contraindications can exercise just as their nonpregnant counterparts do. (See box.)
A clinical evaluation of each patient is recommended before prescribing exercise, including an assessment of the type and intensity of exercise, as well as the duration and frequency of exercise sessions.
Contact sports and exercises with a high risk of falling or abdominal trauma should be avoided. Scuba diving should be avoided because this activity puts the fetus at increased risk for decompression sickness secondary to the inability of the fetal pulmonary circulation to filter bubbles.
Exercise Intensity
Moderate exercise is defined as a level of intensity that still allows normal conversation—equivalent, for example, to brisk walking at 3–4 miles per hour. For women who have been sedentary and are taking up exercise for the first time, a gradual progression is recommended.
Those who are fit should be advised that pregnancy is not a time for greatly improving physical fitness.
Pregnant women should use caution in increasing the intensity of their workouts, especially when they are extending exercise sessions beyond 45 minutes, because body core temperatures can rise above safe limits after that time. Strenuous exercise has not been proved to increase overall benefit and could actually be harmful.
Fetal Effects
Maternal cardiovascular, respiratory, and thermoregulatory adaptation occurs as a result of pregnancy and is further challenged by the addition of exercise.
Some physicians are hesitant to prescribe exercise for pregnant women because of the hypothetical fetal risks of impaired transplacental blood flow of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nutrients during exercise, as well as the potentially teratogenic effects of raising fetal temperature.
Most studies show a minimal to moderate increase in fetal heart rate during exercise, and there is also evidence of heart rate decelerations and bradycardia; however, no lasting fetal effects have been reported.
Loss of fluid through sweat may compromise heat dissipation, so maintenance of hydration—and thus blood volume—is essential to controlling core temperature.
Extra Nutritional Requirements
Although published data on a link between low birth weight and maternal exercise are conflicting, it appears that adequate energy intake can offset any exercise-induced decrease in birth weight.
By the second trimester of pregnancy, an extra 300 calories are needed daily to meet general metabolic needs in pregnancy; exercise increases this requirement.
Pregnant women use carbohydrates at a greater rate than do nonpregnant women and there is preferential use of this form of energy during non-weight-bearing exercise, making adequate carbohydrate intake of particular importance.
Elite Athletes
Most elite athletes choose to continue training during pregnancy, but they must be told that they probably will not achieve the same level of performance as they did before pregnancy, and the physiologic changes they experience will also make them more prone to injury.
Although routine prenatal care is sufficient for most women who exercise, elite athletes require closer observation.
Women engaging in endurance sports can be prone to anemia that results from increased blood volume during pregnancy. High-intensity, prolonged, and frequent exercise can put women at greater risk of thermoregulatory complications as well, and will usually result in less maternal and fetal weight gain.
Gestational Diabetes
The American Diabetes Association has endorsed exercise as a helpful adjunctive therapy for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) when glycemic control cannot be achieved through diet alone.
Approximately 39% of patients with GDM require insulin therapy, but in my experience, exercise is a safe and effective alternative for most of these women.
The key to achieving euglycemia through exercise is ensuring the adequate duration and intensity of the activity. At least half an hour of brisk walking per day is sufficient to upregulate insulin sensitivity, obviating the need for insulin therapy.
Weight Control
Although exercise should never be used for weight control during pregnancy, excessive weight gain should be avoided.
The current Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines on weight gain—which recommend a gain of 25–35 pounds for normal-weight women with a singleton pregnancy—are too high and are based on historical concerns about the effects of famine on fetal growth retardation.
The effect of gestational weight gain on pregnancy outcomes in obese women is not well studied. “It is my opinion that the IOM guidelines are outdated, and that weight gain recommendations should be individualized,” he noted.
Postpartum Exercise
Because failure to lose weight gained in pregnancy is a significant contributor to the obesity epidemic, the promotion of good exercise habits during pregnancy can also sow the seeds for postpartum exercise and weight loss.
In a study by Dr. Artal and colleagues, a weekly structured exercise program plus diet in postpartum overweight women were found to be much more effective in achieving weight loss after 12 weeks, compared with a single 1-hour education session about diet and exercise (J. Women's Health [Larchmt] 2003;12:991–8).
Staying hydrated is key, as sweating may compromise heat dissipation. Lynda Banzi
Contraindications To Exercising During Pregnancy
Absolute Contraindications
Hemodynamically significant heart disease
Restrictive lung disease
Incompetent cervix/cerclage
Multiple gestation at risk forpremature labor
Persistent second- or third-trimester bleeding
Placenta previa after 26 weeks'gestation
Premature labor during the current pregnancy
Ruptured membranes
Preeclampsia/pregnancy-induced hypertension
Relative Contraindications
Severe anemia
Unevaluated maternal cardiac arrhythmia
Chronic bronchitis
Poorly controlled type 1 diabetes
Extreme morbid obesity
Extreme underweight (body massindex [kg/m
History of extremely sedentary lifestyle
Intrauterine growth restriction in current pregnancy
Poorly controlled hypertension
Orthopedic limitations
Poorly controlled seizure disorder
Poorly controlled hyperthyroidism
Heavy smoker
Source: Obstet. Gynecol. 2002;99:171–3
Although exercise is promoted to the general population for its well-recognized benefits, it is still not adequately accepted or recommended during pregnancy, according to Raul Artal, M.D., professor and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women's health at St. Louis University.
The hesitance of physicians to recommend exercise to pregnant women is rooted in old-fashioned notions of pregnancy as a time of confinement, he said.
With evidence to show that regular, moderate exercise in women with healthy pregnancies results in no adverse maternal or fetal effects, it could be argued that, in the spirit of “primum non nocere,” physicians should make exercise recommendations a priority, said Dr. Artal, a noted expert in exercise physiology in pregnancy.
Because it is recognized that habits adopted during pregnancy can result in persistent lifestyle improvements, the promotion of exercise during pregnancy is an important public health issue that could significantly reduce the lifetime risks of obesity, chronic hypertension, and diabetes—not only for pregnant women, but also but for their families, he said.
Dr. Artal's pregnancy exercise recommendations include:
Healthy Pregnancy? Few Restrictions
Women with healthy pregnancies and no contraindications can exercise just as their nonpregnant counterparts do. (See box.)
A clinical evaluation of each patient is recommended before prescribing exercise, including an assessment of the type and intensity of exercise, as well as the duration and frequency of exercise sessions.
Contact sports and exercises with a high risk of falling or abdominal trauma should be avoided. Scuba diving should be avoided because this activity puts the fetus at increased risk for decompression sickness secondary to the inability of the fetal pulmonary circulation to filter bubbles.
Exercise Intensity
Moderate exercise is defined as a level of intensity that still allows normal conversation—equivalent, for example, to brisk walking at 3–4 miles per hour. For women who have been sedentary and are taking up exercise for the first time, a gradual progression is recommended.
Those who are fit should be advised that pregnancy is not a time for greatly improving physical fitness.
Pregnant women should use caution in increasing the intensity of their workouts, especially when they are extending exercise sessions beyond 45 minutes, because body core temperatures can rise above safe limits after that time. Strenuous exercise has not been proved to increase overall benefit and could actually be harmful.
Fetal Effects
Maternal cardiovascular, respiratory, and thermoregulatory adaptation occurs as a result of pregnancy and is further challenged by the addition of exercise.
Some physicians are hesitant to prescribe exercise for pregnant women because of the hypothetical fetal risks of impaired transplacental blood flow of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nutrients during exercise, as well as the potentially teratogenic effects of raising fetal temperature.
Most studies show a minimal to moderate increase in fetal heart rate during exercise, and there is also evidence of heart rate decelerations and bradycardia; however, no lasting fetal effects have been reported.
Loss of fluid through sweat may compromise heat dissipation, so maintenance of hydration—and thus blood volume—is essential to controlling core temperature.
Extra Nutritional Requirements
Although published data on a link between low birth weight and maternal exercise are conflicting, it appears that adequate energy intake can offset any exercise-induced decrease in birth weight.
By the second trimester of pregnancy, an extra 300 calories are needed daily to meet general metabolic needs in pregnancy; exercise increases this requirement.
Pregnant women use carbohydrates at a greater rate than do nonpregnant women and there is preferential use of this form of energy during non-weight-bearing exercise, making adequate carbohydrate intake of particular importance.
Elite Athletes
Most elite athletes choose to continue training during pregnancy, but they must be told that they probably will not achieve the same level of performance as they did before pregnancy, and the physiologic changes they experience will also make them more prone to injury.
Although routine prenatal care is sufficient for most women who exercise, elite athletes require closer observation.
Women engaging in endurance sports can be prone to anemia that results from increased blood volume during pregnancy. High-intensity, prolonged, and frequent exercise can put women at greater risk of thermoregulatory complications as well, and will usually result in less maternal and fetal weight gain.
Gestational Diabetes
The American Diabetes Association has endorsed exercise as a helpful adjunctive therapy for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) when glycemic control cannot be achieved through diet alone.
Approximately 39% of patients with GDM require insulin therapy, but in my experience, exercise is a safe and effective alternative for most of these women.
The key to achieving euglycemia through exercise is ensuring the adequate duration and intensity of the activity. At least half an hour of brisk walking per day is sufficient to upregulate insulin sensitivity, obviating the need for insulin therapy.
Weight Control
Although exercise should never be used for weight control during pregnancy, excessive weight gain should be avoided.
The current Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines on weight gain—which recommend a gain of 25–35 pounds for normal-weight women with a singleton pregnancy—are too high and are based on historical concerns about the effects of famine on fetal growth retardation.
The effect of gestational weight gain on pregnancy outcomes in obese women is not well studied. “It is my opinion that the IOM guidelines are outdated, and that weight gain recommendations should be individualized,” he noted.
Postpartum Exercise
Because failure to lose weight gained in pregnancy is a significant contributor to the obesity epidemic, the promotion of good exercise habits during pregnancy can also sow the seeds for postpartum exercise and weight loss.
In a study by Dr. Artal and colleagues, a weekly structured exercise program plus diet in postpartum overweight women were found to be much more effective in achieving weight loss after 12 weeks, compared with a single 1-hour education session about diet and exercise (J. Women's Health [Larchmt] 2003;12:991–8).
Staying hydrated is key, as sweating may compromise heat dissipation. Lynda Banzi
Contraindications To Exercising During Pregnancy
Absolute Contraindications
Hemodynamically significant heart disease
Restrictive lung disease
Incompetent cervix/cerclage
Multiple gestation at risk forpremature labor
Persistent second- or third-trimester bleeding
Placenta previa after 26 weeks'gestation
Premature labor during the current pregnancy
Ruptured membranes
Preeclampsia/pregnancy-induced hypertension
Relative Contraindications
Severe anemia
Unevaluated maternal cardiac arrhythmia
Chronic bronchitis
Poorly controlled type 1 diabetes
Extreme morbid obesity
Extreme underweight (body massindex [kg/m
History of extremely sedentary lifestyle
Intrauterine growth restriction in current pregnancy
Poorly controlled hypertension
Orthopedic limitations
Poorly controlled seizure disorder
Poorly controlled hyperthyroidism
Heavy smoker
Source: Obstet. Gynecol. 2002;99:171–3
Although exercise is promoted to the general population for its well-recognized benefits, it is still not adequately accepted or recommended during pregnancy, according to Raul Artal, M.D., professor and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women's health at St. Louis University.
The hesitance of physicians to recommend exercise to pregnant women is rooted in old-fashioned notions of pregnancy as a time of confinement, he said.
With evidence to show that regular, moderate exercise in women with healthy pregnancies results in no adverse maternal or fetal effects, it could be argued that, in the spirit of “primum non nocere,” physicians should make exercise recommendations a priority, said Dr. Artal, a noted expert in exercise physiology in pregnancy.
Because it is recognized that habits adopted during pregnancy can result in persistent lifestyle improvements, the promotion of exercise during pregnancy is an important public health issue that could significantly reduce the lifetime risks of obesity, chronic hypertension, and diabetes—not only for pregnant women, but also but for their families, he said.
Dr. Artal's pregnancy exercise recommendations include:
Healthy Pregnancy? Few Restrictions
Women with healthy pregnancies and no contraindications can exercise just as their nonpregnant counterparts do. (See box.)
A clinical evaluation of each patient is recommended before prescribing exercise, including an assessment of the type and intensity of exercise, as well as the duration and frequency of exercise sessions.
Contact sports and exercises with a high risk of falling or abdominal trauma should be avoided. Scuba diving should be avoided because this activity puts the fetus at increased risk for decompression sickness secondary to the inability of the fetal pulmonary circulation to filter bubbles.
Exercise Intensity
Moderate exercise is defined as a level of intensity that still allows normal conversation—equivalent, for example, to brisk walking at 3–4 miles per hour. For women who have been sedentary and are taking up exercise for the first time, a gradual progression is recommended.
Those who are fit should be advised that pregnancy is not a time for greatly improving physical fitness.
Pregnant women should use caution in increasing the intensity of their workouts, especially when they are extending exercise sessions beyond 45 minutes, because body core temperatures can rise above safe limits after that time. Strenuous exercise has not been proved to increase overall benefit and could actually be harmful.
Fetal Effects
Maternal cardiovascular, respiratory, and thermoregulatory adaptation occurs as a result of pregnancy and is further challenged by the addition of exercise.
Some physicians are hesitant to prescribe exercise for pregnant women because of the hypothetical fetal risks of impaired transplacental blood flow of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nutrients during exercise, as well as the potentially teratogenic effects of raising fetal temperature.
Most studies show a minimal to moderate increase in fetal heart rate during exercise, and there is also evidence of heart rate decelerations and bradycardia; however, no lasting fetal effects have been reported.
Loss of fluid through sweat may compromise heat dissipation, so maintenance of hydration—and thus blood volume—is essential to controlling core temperature.
Extra Nutritional Requirements
Although published data on a link between low birth weight and maternal exercise are conflicting, it appears that adequate energy intake can offset any exercise-induced decrease in birth weight.
By the second trimester of pregnancy, an extra 300 calories are needed daily to meet general metabolic needs in pregnancy; exercise increases this requirement.
Pregnant women use carbohydrates at a greater rate than do nonpregnant women and there is preferential use of this form of energy during non-weight-bearing exercise, making adequate carbohydrate intake of particular importance.
Elite Athletes
Most elite athletes choose to continue training during pregnancy, but they must be told that they probably will not achieve the same level of performance as they did before pregnancy, and the physiologic changes they experience will also make them more prone to injury.
Although routine prenatal care is sufficient for most women who exercise, elite athletes require closer observation.
Women engaging in endurance sports can be prone to anemia that results from increased blood volume during pregnancy. High-intensity, prolonged, and frequent exercise can put women at greater risk of thermoregulatory complications as well, and will usually result in less maternal and fetal weight gain.
Gestational Diabetes
The American Diabetes Association has endorsed exercise as a helpful adjunctive therapy for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) when glycemic control cannot be achieved through diet alone.
Approximately 39% of patients with GDM require insulin therapy, but in my experience, exercise is a safe and effective alternative for most of these women.
The key to achieving euglycemia through exercise is ensuring the adequate duration and intensity of the activity. At least half an hour of brisk walking per day is sufficient to upregulate insulin sensitivity, obviating the need for insulin therapy.
Weight Control
Although exercise should never be used for weight control during pregnancy, excessive weight gain should be avoided.
The current Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines on weight gain—which recommend a gain of 25–35 pounds for normal-weight women with a singleton pregnancy—are too high and are based on historical concerns about the effects of famine on fetal growth retardation.
The effect of gestational weight gain on pregnancy outcomes in obese women is not well studied. “It is my opinion that the IOM guidelines are outdated, and that weight gain recommendations should be individualized,” he noted.
Postpartum Exercise
Because failure to lose weight gained in pregnancy is a significant contributor to the obesity epidemic, the promotion of good exercise habits during pregnancy can also sow the seeds for postpartum exercise and weight loss.
In a study by Dr. Artal and colleagues, a weekly structured exercise program plus diet in postpartum overweight women were found to be much more effective in achieving weight loss after 12 weeks, compared with a single 1-hour education session about diet and exercise (J. Women's Health [Larchmt] 2003;12:991–8).
Staying hydrated is key, as sweating may compromise heat dissipation. Lynda Banzi
Contraindications To Exercising During Pregnancy
Absolute Contraindications
Hemodynamically significant heart disease
Restrictive lung disease
Incompetent cervix/cerclage
Multiple gestation at risk forpremature labor
Persistent second- or third-trimester bleeding
Placenta previa after 26 weeks'gestation
Premature labor during the current pregnancy
Ruptured membranes
Preeclampsia/pregnancy-induced hypertension
Relative Contraindications
Severe anemia
Unevaluated maternal cardiac arrhythmia
Chronic bronchitis
Poorly controlled type 1 diabetes
Extreme morbid obesity
Extreme underweight (body massindex [kg/m
History of extremely sedentary lifestyle
Intrauterine growth restriction in current pregnancy
Poorly controlled hypertension
Orthopedic limitations
Poorly controlled seizure disorder
Poorly controlled hyperthyroidism
Heavy smoker
Source: Obstet. Gynecol. 2002;99:171–3
Postpartum Endoanal Scan Helps Project Incontinence Risk
MONTREAL — Endoanal ultrasound performed immediately postpartum can identify clinically occult anal sphincter defects, which are linked to an increased risk of anal incontinence, according to a British study.
“This technology can improve our prediction of incontinence and has the potential to be used to target postnatal follow-up to women at increased risk,” said Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Speaking at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society, Dr. Toozs-Hobson outlined his study, which compared findings from endoanal ultrasounds performed immediately after delivery in 198 women with anal incontinence. Questionnaires were administered at 6 weeks postpartum.
Clinical evidence of anal sphincter damage had been ruled out in all women after clinical examination by two separate assessors.
While 60% of study participants had intact external and internal anal sphincters seen on endoanal ultrasound, and 30% had an isolated external anal sphincter defect only, the remaining 10% of participants had either defects in both sphincters or such profound distortion of the sphincters that the anatomy was not interpretable.
Among this latter group, 30% of the women reported anal incontinence symptoms at 6 weeks postpartum—which was threefold the rate of the rest of the study participants.
“A severely abnormal endoanal ultrasound scan immediately postpartum increases the risk of anal incontinence three times when compared [with] women with a normal ultrasound or an isolated [external anal sphincter] defect,” Dr. Toozs-Hobson concluded.
He said the clinical absence of ultrasound-detected anal sphincter damage “confirms the concept of occult anal sphincter damage” and could prove very important on a medico-legal level in showing that anal sphincter may not have been “missed” by obstetricians but may be “genuinely occult.”
Endoanal detection of defects also could predict which women should be followed closely for symptoms of incontinence, he said.
Although participants in Dr. Toozs-Hobson's study were not managed any differently based on their endoanal ultrasound results (all had clinically intact sphincters), another recent study altered management when endoanal ultrasound revealed a defect (Obstet. Gynecol. 2005;106:6–13).
“We showed that it is very possible for any resident to be trained to diagnose these clinically occult defects by ultrasound, and that managing these defects definitely improved the outcome,” said Dr. med. Daniel Faltin, one of the authors of that study, who was present in the audience. Dr. Faltin is director of the Dianuro perineology center and consultant in obstetrics and gynecology at the Hôpitaux Universitaires in Geneva.
Dr. Faltin's study randomized 752 primiparous women to clinical and endoanal ultrasonographic examination of the anal sphincter immediately postpartum (experimental group), or clinical examination alone (control group).
In the control group, clinically detected anal sphincter tears were repaired. In the experimental group, when anal sphincter defects were detected, the anal sphincter was surgically exposed and examined, and repairs were made when a tear was identified.
The authors reported a benefit in adding endoanal ultrasonography to the standard clinical exam. At 3 months postpartum, severe incontinence was reported by 3.3% of women in the repair group, compared with 8.7% of women in the control group.
The benefit persisted at 1 year, reported the authors, with severe incontinence reported by 3.2% of the intervention group, compared with 6.7% of the control group.
But the chairman of the session, Abdul H. Sultan, M.D., questioned the value of postpartum endoanal ultrasound, dismissing the idea of occult defects as “more of a myth than anything else.”
“You can pick these defects up clinically if you are properly trained,” he said in an interview. “If you can see what you're looking for, that is the best way forward—all you need to do is improve your clinical skills.”
Dr. Sultan, who is a consultant obstetrician and gynecologist at Mayday University Hospital in Croydon, England, runs courses on the clinical recognition and repair of obstetrical anal sphincter defects.
“Even if you see a defect on ultrasound, you've still got to find it clinically. Otherwise, you cannot repair it,” he said.
Dr. Sultan pointed out that in the Faltin study, five women had an anal sphincter tear diagnosed by ultrasonography that could not be confirmed during surgical exploration of the perineum. Of these women, one reported severe incontinence at 3 months and 1 year postpartum.
MONTREAL — Endoanal ultrasound performed immediately postpartum can identify clinically occult anal sphincter defects, which are linked to an increased risk of anal incontinence, according to a British study.
“This technology can improve our prediction of incontinence and has the potential to be used to target postnatal follow-up to women at increased risk,” said Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Speaking at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society, Dr. Toozs-Hobson outlined his study, which compared findings from endoanal ultrasounds performed immediately after delivery in 198 women with anal incontinence. Questionnaires were administered at 6 weeks postpartum.
Clinical evidence of anal sphincter damage had been ruled out in all women after clinical examination by two separate assessors.
While 60% of study participants had intact external and internal anal sphincters seen on endoanal ultrasound, and 30% had an isolated external anal sphincter defect only, the remaining 10% of participants had either defects in both sphincters or such profound distortion of the sphincters that the anatomy was not interpretable.
Among this latter group, 30% of the women reported anal incontinence symptoms at 6 weeks postpartum—which was threefold the rate of the rest of the study participants.
“A severely abnormal endoanal ultrasound scan immediately postpartum increases the risk of anal incontinence three times when compared [with] women with a normal ultrasound or an isolated [external anal sphincter] defect,” Dr. Toozs-Hobson concluded.
He said the clinical absence of ultrasound-detected anal sphincter damage “confirms the concept of occult anal sphincter damage” and could prove very important on a medico-legal level in showing that anal sphincter may not have been “missed” by obstetricians but may be “genuinely occult.”
Endoanal detection of defects also could predict which women should be followed closely for symptoms of incontinence, he said.
Although participants in Dr. Toozs-Hobson's study were not managed any differently based on their endoanal ultrasound results (all had clinically intact sphincters), another recent study altered management when endoanal ultrasound revealed a defect (Obstet. Gynecol. 2005;106:6–13).
“We showed that it is very possible for any resident to be trained to diagnose these clinically occult defects by ultrasound, and that managing these defects definitely improved the outcome,” said Dr. med. Daniel Faltin, one of the authors of that study, who was present in the audience. Dr. Faltin is director of the Dianuro perineology center and consultant in obstetrics and gynecology at the Hôpitaux Universitaires in Geneva.
Dr. Faltin's study randomized 752 primiparous women to clinical and endoanal ultrasonographic examination of the anal sphincter immediately postpartum (experimental group), or clinical examination alone (control group).
In the control group, clinically detected anal sphincter tears were repaired. In the experimental group, when anal sphincter defects were detected, the anal sphincter was surgically exposed and examined, and repairs were made when a tear was identified.
The authors reported a benefit in adding endoanal ultrasonography to the standard clinical exam. At 3 months postpartum, severe incontinence was reported by 3.3% of women in the repair group, compared with 8.7% of women in the control group.
The benefit persisted at 1 year, reported the authors, with severe incontinence reported by 3.2% of the intervention group, compared with 6.7% of the control group.
But the chairman of the session, Abdul H. Sultan, M.D., questioned the value of postpartum endoanal ultrasound, dismissing the idea of occult defects as “more of a myth than anything else.”
“You can pick these defects up clinically if you are properly trained,” he said in an interview. “If you can see what you're looking for, that is the best way forward—all you need to do is improve your clinical skills.”
Dr. Sultan, who is a consultant obstetrician and gynecologist at Mayday University Hospital in Croydon, England, runs courses on the clinical recognition and repair of obstetrical anal sphincter defects.
“Even if you see a defect on ultrasound, you've still got to find it clinically. Otherwise, you cannot repair it,” he said.
Dr. Sultan pointed out that in the Faltin study, five women had an anal sphincter tear diagnosed by ultrasonography that could not be confirmed during surgical exploration of the perineum. Of these women, one reported severe incontinence at 3 months and 1 year postpartum.
MONTREAL — Endoanal ultrasound performed immediately postpartum can identify clinically occult anal sphincter defects, which are linked to an increased risk of anal incontinence, according to a British study.
“This technology can improve our prediction of incontinence and has the potential to be used to target postnatal follow-up to women at increased risk,” said Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Speaking at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society, Dr. Toozs-Hobson outlined his study, which compared findings from endoanal ultrasounds performed immediately after delivery in 198 women with anal incontinence. Questionnaires were administered at 6 weeks postpartum.
Clinical evidence of anal sphincter damage had been ruled out in all women after clinical examination by two separate assessors.
While 60% of study participants had intact external and internal anal sphincters seen on endoanal ultrasound, and 30% had an isolated external anal sphincter defect only, the remaining 10% of participants had either defects in both sphincters or such profound distortion of the sphincters that the anatomy was not interpretable.
Among this latter group, 30% of the women reported anal incontinence symptoms at 6 weeks postpartum—which was threefold the rate of the rest of the study participants.
“A severely abnormal endoanal ultrasound scan immediately postpartum increases the risk of anal incontinence three times when compared [with] women with a normal ultrasound or an isolated [external anal sphincter] defect,” Dr. Toozs-Hobson concluded.
He said the clinical absence of ultrasound-detected anal sphincter damage “confirms the concept of occult anal sphincter damage” and could prove very important on a medico-legal level in showing that anal sphincter may not have been “missed” by obstetricians but may be “genuinely occult.”
Endoanal detection of defects also could predict which women should be followed closely for symptoms of incontinence, he said.
Although participants in Dr. Toozs-Hobson's study were not managed any differently based on their endoanal ultrasound results (all had clinically intact sphincters), another recent study altered management when endoanal ultrasound revealed a defect (Obstet. Gynecol. 2005;106:6–13).
“We showed that it is very possible for any resident to be trained to diagnose these clinically occult defects by ultrasound, and that managing these defects definitely improved the outcome,” said Dr. med. Daniel Faltin, one of the authors of that study, who was present in the audience. Dr. Faltin is director of the Dianuro perineology center and consultant in obstetrics and gynecology at the Hôpitaux Universitaires in Geneva.
Dr. Faltin's study randomized 752 primiparous women to clinical and endoanal ultrasonographic examination of the anal sphincter immediately postpartum (experimental group), or clinical examination alone (control group).
In the control group, clinically detected anal sphincter tears were repaired. In the experimental group, when anal sphincter defects were detected, the anal sphincter was surgically exposed and examined, and repairs were made when a tear was identified.
The authors reported a benefit in adding endoanal ultrasonography to the standard clinical exam. At 3 months postpartum, severe incontinence was reported by 3.3% of women in the repair group, compared with 8.7% of women in the control group.
The benefit persisted at 1 year, reported the authors, with severe incontinence reported by 3.2% of the intervention group, compared with 6.7% of the control group.
But the chairman of the session, Abdul H. Sultan, M.D., questioned the value of postpartum endoanal ultrasound, dismissing the idea of occult defects as “more of a myth than anything else.”
“You can pick these defects up clinically if you are properly trained,” he said in an interview. “If you can see what you're looking for, that is the best way forward—all you need to do is improve your clinical skills.”
Dr. Sultan, who is a consultant obstetrician and gynecologist at Mayday University Hospital in Croydon, England, runs courses on the clinical recognition and repair of obstetrical anal sphincter defects.
“Even if you see a defect on ultrasound, you've still got to find it clinically. Otherwise, you cannot repair it,” he said.
Dr. Sultan pointed out that in the Faltin study, five women had an anal sphincter tear diagnosed by ultrasonography that could not be confirmed during surgical exploration of the perineum. Of these women, one reported severe incontinence at 3 months and 1 year postpartum.
Vaginal Delivery Linked to High Incontinence Risk : Odds of pelvic floor disorders are increased nearly twofold, compared with cesarean delivery, nulliparity.
MONTREAL — Vaginal delivery is associated with a near twofold increased odds of pelvic floor disorders, compared with cesarean delivery and nulliparity, according to results of a large epidemiologic study.
“This study finally gives us some numbers to hang our hat on, with respect to pelvic floor dysfunction, when we are counseling patients about vaginal versus cesarean delivery,” the study's principal investigator, Emily Lukacz, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
“A twofold increased odds of a pelvic floor disorder sounds like a lot, but surgical delivery is not without its own risks,” she said in an interview, adding that the protective effects of cesarean section must be balanced against the known risks of surgical delivery.
She cautioned that although the study shows an association between vaginal delivery and pelvic floor disorders, it does not prove causality.
“We are really still in the infancy of understanding the role of mode of delivery on the development of pelvic floor disorders until we can have a randomized, controlled trial of vaginal versus cesarean delivery, which will likely never happen,” said Dr. Lukacz of the University of California, San Diego Medical Center.
Still, she said that she suspects it's hard not to link the trauma caused by vaginal delivery to many of these disorders. “There are not many things that can cause that kind of damage,” she said. “However, not all women who deliver vaginally develop pelvic floor disorders. Therefore, future research should be aimed at identifying women at risk for developing pelvic floor disorders due to vaginal delivery.”
The Kaiser Permanente continence-associated risk epidemiology study was a population-based study of 12,200 randomly selected women between the ages of 25 and 84.
Using the validated Epidemiology of Prolapse and Incontinence Questionnaire, researchers assessed participants for symptoms and signs of stress urinary incontinence, overactive bladder (with or without leakage), and anal incontinence (leakage of solid, liquid, or gas), as well as pelvic organ prolapse.
A total of 4,103 surveys had sufficient information for analysis, and these were then categorized into three birth groups. The nulliparous group (19%) included women who had never been pregnant, or who had never delivered a baby larger than 4.5 pounds. The cesarean section group (10%) included women who had delivered only by cesarean section (with or without prior labor), or with no vaginal deliveries of more than 4.5 pounds. The vaginal delivery group (71%) included women with a history of a vaginal delivery of more than 4.5 pounds.
After adjusting for age, BMI, and parity, the vaginal delivery group had higher rates of every disorder, compared with the nulliparous and cesarean groups. (See chart.)
The study results are “highly controversial” but in line with other research, particularly the large Norwegian Epidemiology of Incontinence in the County of Nord-Trøndelag (EPINCONT) study. That Norwegian study found vaginal delivery associated with a higher risk (odds ratio 2.2) of moderate to severe urinary incontinence compared with cesarean delivery (N. Engl. J. Med. 2003;348:900–7), Dr. Lukacz said.
Dr. Lukacz and her team also performed a subanalysis of the cesarean section group to assess the impact of cesarean sections that involved labor and those that did not; they found a significantly higher prevalence of prolapse in the group that underwent labor, as well as a trend toward a higher prevalence of stress incontinence.
The rates of overactive bladder, anal incontinence, and overall pelvic floor disorders did not differ significantly between groups in the subanalysis. “The mechanism of trauma may be different for the development of the different disorders,” she suggested.
Dr. Lukacz noted that while great efforts continue in the treatment of incontinence, a shift in focus toward prevention is crucial. “The key is being able to identify who is at risk for developing those conditions—and this is a step in that direction.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
MONTREAL — Vaginal delivery is associated with a near twofold increased odds of pelvic floor disorders, compared with cesarean delivery and nulliparity, according to results of a large epidemiologic study.
“This study finally gives us some numbers to hang our hat on, with respect to pelvic floor dysfunction, when we are counseling patients about vaginal versus cesarean delivery,” the study's principal investigator, Emily Lukacz, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
“A twofold increased odds of a pelvic floor disorder sounds like a lot, but surgical delivery is not without its own risks,” she said in an interview, adding that the protective effects of cesarean section must be balanced against the known risks of surgical delivery.
She cautioned that although the study shows an association between vaginal delivery and pelvic floor disorders, it does not prove causality.
“We are really still in the infancy of understanding the role of mode of delivery on the development of pelvic floor disorders until we can have a randomized, controlled trial of vaginal versus cesarean delivery, which will likely never happen,” said Dr. Lukacz of the University of California, San Diego Medical Center.
Still, she said that she suspects it's hard not to link the trauma caused by vaginal delivery to many of these disorders. “There are not many things that can cause that kind of damage,” she said. “However, not all women who deliver vaginally develop pelvic floor disorders. Therefore, future research should be aimed at identifying women at risk for developing pelvic floor disorders due to vaginal delivery.”
The Kaiser Permanente continence-associated risk epidemiology study was a population-based study of 12,200 randomly selected women between the ages of 25 and 84.
Using the validated Epidemiology of Prolapse and Incontinence Questionnaire, researchers assessed participants for symptoms and signs of stress urinary incontinence, overactive bladder (with or without leakage), and anal incontinence (leakage of solid, liquid, or gas), as well as pelvic organ prolapse.
A total of 4,103 surveys had sufficient information for analysis, and these were then categorized into three birth groups. The nulliparous group (19%) included women who had never been pregnant, or who had never delivered a baby larger than 4.5 pounds. The cesarean section group (10%) included women who had delivered only by cesarean section (with or without prior labor), or with no vaginal deliveries of more than 4.5 pounds. The vaginal delivery group (71%) included women with a history of a vaginal delivery of more than 4.5 pounds.
After adjusting for age, BMI, and parity, the vaginal delivery group had higher rates of every disorder, compared with the nulliparous and cesarean groups. (See chart.)
The study results are “highly controversial” but in line with other research, particularly the large Norwegian Epidemiology of Incontinence in the County of Nord-Trøndelag (EPINCONT) study. That Norwegian study found vaginal delivery associated with a higher risk (odds ratio 2.2) of moderate to severe urinary incontinence compared with cesarean delivery (N. Engl. J. Med. 2003;348:900–7), Dr. Lukacz said.
Dr. Lukacz and her team also performed a subanalysis of the cesarean section group to assess the impact of cesarean sections that involved labor and those that did not; they found a significantly higher prevalence of prolapse in the group that underwent labor, as well as a trend toward a higher prevalence of stress incontinence.
The rates of overactive bladder, anal incontinence, and overall pelvic floor disorders did not differ significantly between groups in the subanalysis. “The mechanism of trauma may be different for the development of the different disorders,” she suggested.
Dr. Lukacz noted that while great efforts continue in the treatment of incontinence, a shift in focus toward prevention is crucial. “The key is being able to identify who is at risk for developing those conditions—and this is a step in that direction.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
MONTREAL — Vaginal delivery is associated with a near twofold increased odds of pelvic floor disorders, compared with cesarean delivery and nulliparity, according to results of a large epidemiologic study.
“This study finally gives us some numbers to hang our hat on, with respect to pelvic floor dysfunction, when we are counseling patients about vaginal versus cesarean delivery,” the study's principal investigator, Emily Lukacz, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
“A twofold increased odds of a pelvic floor disorder sounds like a lot, but surgical delivery is not without its own risks,” she said in an interview, adding that the protective effects of cesarean section must be balanced against the known risks of surgical delivery.
She cautioned that although the study shows an association between vaginal delivery and pelvic floor disorders, it does not prove causality.
“We are really still in the infancy of understanding the role of mode of delivery on the development of pelvic floor disorders until we can have a randomized, controlled trial of vaginal versus cesarean delivery, which will likely never happen,” said Dr. Lukacz of the University of California, San Diego Medical Center.
Still, she said that she suspects it's hard not to link the trauma caused by vaginal delivery to many of these disorders. “There are not many things that can cause that kind of damage,” she said. “However, not all women who deliver vaginally develop pelvic floor disorders. Therefore, future research should be aimed at identifying women at risk for developing pelvic floor disorders due to vaginal delivery.”
The Kaiser Permanente continence-associated risk epidemiology study was a population-based study of 12,200 randomly selected women between the ages of 25 and 84.
Using the validated Epidemiology of Prolapse and Incontinence Questionnaire, researchers assessed participants for symptoms and signs of stress urinary incontinence, overactive bladder (with or without leakage), and anal incontinence (leakage of solid, liquid, or gas), as well as pelvic organ prolapse.
A total of 4,103 surveys had sufficient information for analysis, and these were then categorized into three birth groups. The nulliparous group (19%) included women who had never been pregnant, or who had never delivered a baby larger than 4.5 pounds. The cesarean section group (10%) included women who had delivered only by cesarean section (with or without prior labor), or with no vaginal deliveries of more than 4.5 pounds. The vaginal delivery group (71%) included women with a history of a vaginal delivery of more than 4.5 pounds.
After adjusting for age, BMI, and parity, the vaginal delivery group had higher rates of every disorder, compared with the nulliparous and cesarean groups. (See chart.)
The study results are “highly controversial” but in line with other research, particularly the large Norwegian Epidemiology of Incontinence in the County of Nord-Trøndelag (EPINCONT) study. That Norwegian study found vaginal delivery associated with a higher risk (odds ratio 2.2) of moderate to severe urinary incontinence compared with cesarean delivery (N. Engl. J. Med. 2003;348:900–7), Dr. Lukacz said.
Dr. Lukacz and her team also performed a subanalysis of the cesarean section group to assess the impact of cesarean sections that involved labor and those that did not; they found a significantly higher prevalence of prolapse in the group that underwent labor, as well as a trend toward a higher prevalence of stress incontinence.
The rates of overactive bladder, anal incontinence, and overall pelvic floor disorders did not differ significantly between groups in the subanalysis. “The mechanism of trauma may be different for the development of the different disorders,” she suggested.
Dr. Lukacz noted that while great efforts continue in the treatment of incontinence, a shift in focus toward prevention is crucial. “The key is being able to identify who is at risk for developing those conditions—and this is a step in that direction.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Refeeding Syndrome Risk Hard To Predict With Eating Disorders
MONTREAL — Refeeding syndrome is a potential problem for all eating-disordered patients who are reintroducing fluids and food, but it is difficult to predict which patients are at greatest risk, Ovidio Bermudez, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
“There is something about the reintroduction of nutrients to someone who has suffered a significant nutritional insult that can cause severe metabolic imbalances, resulting in cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological, hepatic, and even bone marrow dysfunction,” he said in an interview.
Once the body has adjusted to a state of malnourishment, refeeding will immediately signal the body to switch off compensatory mechanisms, thus unmasking nutritional deficiencies, said Dr. Bermudez, medical director of the eating disorders program at Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.
The result is electrolyte and fluid imbalances, glucose intolerance, liver dysfunction, and thiamine deficiency.
“All patients who are refed will develop some degree of refeeding syndrome, but there is great variability in terms of the severity of the readjustment. Most patients fare well without any apparent clinical challenges, some patients have a moderate challenge,” and a few have severe or even fatal consequences, he said.
Although there are few predictive factors to identify patients most at risk, they tend to be those who are the most underweight and have low prealbumin levels. But these predictors should not be relied on too heavily, Dr. Bermudez said.
“The idea that a person who has had only a moderate metabolic insult is not going to develop some of these problems would be a false reassurance. The best approach we should have as physicians is to know the literature and know the group of patients at highest risk,” but to be alert for any trouble, he said.
By screening for problems prior to refeeding and then monitoring patients carefully during the refeeding, Dr. Bermudez noted, most serious consequences can be avoided.
He recommended that a comprehensive metabolic panel (including liver and renal function tests), calcium, phosphorous and magnesium levels, CBC, and a prealbumin test should be performed prior to refeeding. Any vitamin and trace mineral deficiencies, as well as electrolyte and glucose imbalances, should also be corrected at that time.
During refeeding, fluids and caloric intake should be increased gradually by 200–250 kcal every 2–3 days, and weight gain should not exceed 2–3 pounds per week, Dr. Bermudez said.
Initially, patients should have their vital signs, weight, and fluid intake and output monitored daily, with weekly assessments of CBC, electrolytes and glucose, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, and liver and renal function. “How long to do this is not quite clear. In our setting, it is usually 2–3 weeks, but in others it can be up to 6 weeks,” he said.
MONTREAL — Refeeding syndrome is a potential problem for all eating-disordered patients who are reintroducing fluids and food, but it is difficult to predict which patients are at greatest risk, Ovidio Bermudez, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
“There is something about the reintroduction of nutrients to someone who has suffered a significant nutritional insult that can cause severe metabolic imbalances, resulting in cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological, hepatic, and even bone marrow dysfunction,” he said in an interview.
Once the body has adjusted to a state of malnourishment, refeeding will immediately signal the body to switch off compensatory mechanisms, thus unmasking nutritional deficiencies, said Dr. Bermudez, medical director of the eating disorders program at Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.
The result is electrolyte and fluid imbalances, glucose intolerance, liver dysfunction, and thiamine deficiency.
“All patients who are refed will develop some degree of refeeding syndrome, but there is great variability in terms of the severity of the readjustment. Most patients fare well without any apparent clinical challenges, some patients have a moderate challenge,” and a few have severe or even fatal consequences, he said.
Although there are few predictive factors to identify patients most at risk, they tend to be those who are the most underweight and have low prealbumin levels. But these predictors should not be relied on too heavily, Dr. Bermudez said.
“The idea that a person who has had only a moderate metabolic insult is not going to develop some of these problems would be a false reassurance. The best approach we should have as physicians is to know the literature and know the group of patients at highest risk,” but to be alert for any trouble, he said.
By screening for problems prior to refeeding and then monitoring patients carefully during the refeeding, Dr. Bermudez noted, most serious consequences can be avoided.
He recommended that a comprehensive metabolic panel (including liver and renal function tests), calcium, phosphorous and magnesium levels, CBC, and a prealbumin test should be performed prior to refeeding. Any vitamin and trace mineral deficiencies, as well as electrolyte and glucose imbalances, should also be corrected at that time.
During refeeding, fluids and caloric intake should be increased gradually by 200–250 kcal every 2–3 days, and weight gain should not exceed 2–3 pounds per week, Dr. Bermudez said.
Initially, patients should have their vital signs, weight, and fluid intake and output monitored daily, with weekly assessments of CBC, electrolytes and glucose, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, and liver and renal function. “How long to do this is not quite clear. In our setting, it is usually 2–3 weeks, but in others it can be up to 6 weeks,” he said.
MONTREAL — Refeeding syndrome is a potential problem for all eating-disordered patients who are reintroducing fluids and food, but it is difficult to predict which patients are at greatest risk, Ovidio Bermudez, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
“There is something about the reintroduction of nutrients to someone who has suffered a significant nutritional insult that can cause severe metabolic imbalances, resulting in cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological, hepatic, and even bone marrow dysfunction,” he said in an interview.
Once the body has adjusted to a state of malnourishment, refeeding will immediately signal the body to switch off compensatory mechanisms, thus unmasking nutritional deficiencies, said Dr. Bermudez, medical director of the eating disorders program at Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.
The result is electrolyte and fluid imbalances, glucose intolerance, liver dysfunction, and thiamine deficiency.
“All patients who are refed will develop some degree of refeeding syndrome, but there is great variability in terms of the severity of the readjustment. Most patients fare well without any apparent clinical challenges, some patients have a moderate challenge,” and a few have severe or even fatal consequences, he said.
Although there are few predictive factors to identify patients most at risk, they tend to be those who are the most underweight and have low prealbumin levels. But these predictors should not be relied on too heavily, Dr. Bermudez said.
“The idea that a person who has had only a moderate metabolic insult is not going to develop some of these problems would be a false reassurance. The best approach we should have as physicians is to know the literature and know the group of patients at highest risk,” but to be alert for any trouble, he said.
By screening for problems prior to refeeding and then monitoring patients carefully during the refeeding, Dr. Bermudez noted, most serious consequences can be avoided.
He recommended that a comprehensive metabolic panel (including liver and renal function tests), calcium, phosphorous and magnesium levels, CBC, and a prealbumin test should be performed prior to refeeding. Any vitamin and trace mineral deficiencies, as well as electrolyte and glucose imbalances, should also be corrected at that time.
During refeeding, fluids and caloric intake should be increased gradually by 200–250 kcal every 2–3 days, and weight gain should not exceed 2–3 pounds per week, Dr. Bermudez said.
Initially, patients should have their vital signs, weight, and fluid intake and output monitored daily, with weekly assessments of CBC, electrolytes and glucose, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, and liver and renal function. “How long to do this is not quite clear. In our setting, it is usually 2–3 weeks, but in others it can be up to 6 weeks,” he said.
Expert Sees Possible Link Between Strep, Anorexia : Rarely, group A β-Hemolytic streptococcal infection can lead to sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition, but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A β-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, Dr. Sokol said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things. What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” she said.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7–16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. Present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-triggered anorexia could alert physicians and patients to the need for more aggressive prevention strategies, she said.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition, but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A β-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, Dr. Sokol said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things. What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” she said.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7–16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. Present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-triggered anorexia could alert physicians and patients to the need for more aggressive prevention strategies, she said.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition, but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A β-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, Dr. Sokol said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things. What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” she said.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7–16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. Present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-triggered anorexia could alert physicians and patients to the need for more aggressive prevention strategies, she said.
E-Mail Therapy Effectively Treats Eating Disorders
MONTREAL — Psychotherapy for eating disorders can be delivered effectively by e-mail and can reach a segment of the population that might otherwise decline treatment, Paul Robinson, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
He recruited 97 participants with eating disorders from a university e-mail list for his study. The diagnoses of bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and eating disorders not otherwise specified all fulfilled DSM-IV criteria and were made using online questionnaires and assessments.
Roughly 80% of the cohort had received no previous treatment for their eating disorder, said Dr. Robinson, a psychiatrist with the eating disorders service of Royal Free Hospital, London.
Participants were randomized to e-mail bulimia therapy (EBT), to self-directed writing (SDW), or to a treatment waiting list, which was the control.
The EBT group (36) received 12 weeks of e-mail therapy from professionals who were experienced in the outpatient management of eating disorders. Participants were asked to write twice weekly in a food, behavior, and emotions diary, to which the therapists responded.
“We looked at the diary and annotated it with our own comments,” said Dr. Robinson. “For example, if a patient wrote that she had eaten nothing for breakfast or lunch and then binged in the evening, we might have responded by saying that eating nothing all day might be triggering the binge at night,” he said.
Participants in the SDW group (34) were asked to write about their eating disorder and e-mail their comments to Dr. Robinson twice a week, although he acknowledged the e-mails he sent did not offer specific counseling to this group.
“They knew I was reading [their comments], and they knew that if I thought they were in danger I would act, and I think that was important to them,” he said.
Participants in the control group (27) waited 12 weeks and were then randomized to either EBT or SDW.
At the 12-week assessment, the e-mail therapy and SDW groups were combined into one “e-therapy” group and compared with the control group. The results showed that, while none of the control participants lost their eating disorder diagnosis, 18.6% of the e-therapy group did.
Assessments using the Bulimic Investigatory Test, Edinburgh, (BITE) severity and symptom scores showed a mean reduction in BITE severity score of 1.2 in the e-therapy group, compared with a reduction of 0.2 in the control group. Similarly, the mean reduction in the BITE symptom score was significantly greater in the e-therapy group (2.1 versus 0.3).
When asked about their desired body mass index, participants who had completed the e-mail therapy indicated that they were more willing to accept the idea of a higher BMI than were those participants in the control group.
There was a significant correlation between the number of words a participant wrote and the degree of symptom improvements in the e-mail bulimia therapy group only, Dr. Robinson said.
“It is hard to explain the response in the self-directed writing group, although there is quite a lot in the literature about the therapeutic efficacy of writing, and how it can lower depression scores,” he noted.
Although the study found no difference in outcome between EBT and SDW, there was a trend in favor of EBT.
E-mail therapy was well accepted by the participants, with 84% saying that they would be willing to engage in further therapy either online or face to face.
MONTREAL — Psychotherapy for eating disorders can be delivered effectively by e-mail and can reach a segment of the population that might otherwise decline treatment, Paul Robinson, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
He recruited 97 participants with eating disorders from a university e-mail list for his study. The diagnoses of bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and eating disorders not otherwise specified all fulfilled DSM-IV criteria and were made using online questionnaires and assessments.
Roughly 80% of the cohort had received no previous treatment for their eating disorder, said Dr. Robinson, a psychiatrist with the eating disorders service of Royal Free Hospital, London.
Participants were randomized to e-mail bulimia therapy (EBT), to self-directed writing (SDW), or to a treatment waiting list, which was the control.
The EBT group (36) received 12 weeks of e-mail therapy from professionals who were experienced in the outpatient management of eating disorders. Participants were asked to write twice weekly in a food, behavior, and emotions diary, to which the therapists responded.
“We looked at the diary and annotated it with our own comments,” said Dr. Robinson. “For example, if a patient wrote that she had eaten nothing for breakfast or lunch and then binged in the evening, we might have responded by saying that eating nothing all day might be triggering the binge at night,” he said.
Participants in the SDW group (34) were asked to write about their eating disorder and e-mail their comments to Dr. Robinson twice a week, although he acknowledged the e-mails he sent did not offer specific counseling to this group.
“They knew I was reading [their comments], and they knew that if I thought they were in danger I would act, and I think that was important to them,” he said.
Participants in the control group (27) waited 12 weeks and were then randomized to either EBT or SDW.
At the 12-week assessment, the e-mail therapy and SDW groups were combined into one “e-therapy” group and compared with the control group. The results showed that, while none of the control participants lost their eating disorder diagnosis, 18.6% of the e-therapy group did.
Assessments using the Bulimic Investigatory Test, Edinburgh, (BITE) severity and symptom scores showed a mean reduction in BITE severity score of 1.2 in the e-therapy group, compared with a reduction of 0.2 in the control group. Similarly, the mean reduction in the BITE symptom score was significantly greater in the e-therapy group (2.1 versus 0.3).
When asked about their desired body mass index, participants who had completed the e-mail therapy indicated that they were more willing to accept the idea of a higher BMI than were those participants in the control group.
There was a significant correlation between the number of words a participant wrote and the degree of symptom improvements in the e-mail bulimia therapy group only, Dr. Robinson said.
“It is hard to explain the response in the self-directed writing group, although there is quite a lot in the literature about the therapeutic efficacy of writing, and how it can lower depression scores,” he noted.
Although the study found no difference in outcome between EBT and SDW, there was a trend in favor of EBT.
E-mail therapy was well accepted by the participants, with 84% saying that they would be willing to engage in further therapy either online or face to face.
MONTREAL — Psychotherapy for eating disorders can be delivered effectively by e-mail and can reach a segment of the population that might otherwise decline treatment, Paul Robinson, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
He recruited 97 participants with eating disorders from a university e-mail list for his study. The diagnoses of bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and eating disorders not otherwise specified all fulfilled DSM-IV criteria and were made using online questionnaires and assessments.
Roughly 80% of the cohort had received no previous treatment for their eating disorder, said Dr. Robinson, a psychiatrist with the eating disorders service of Royal Free Hospital, London.
Participants were randomized to e-mail bulimia therapy (EBT), to self-directed writing (SDW), or to a treatment waiting list, which was the control.
The EBT group (36) received 12 weeks of e-mail therapy from professionals who were experienced in the outpatient management of eating disorders. Participants were asked to write twice weekly in a food, behavior, and emotions diary, to which the therapists responded.
“We looked at the diary and annotated it with our own comments,” said Dr. Robinson. “For example, if a patient wrote that she had eaten nothing for breakfast or lunch and then binged in the evening, we might have responded by saying that eating nothing all day might be triggering the binge at night,” he said.
Participants in the SDW group (34) were asked to write about their eating disorder and e-mail their comments to Dr. Robinson twice a week, although he acknowledged the e-mails he sent did not offer specific counseling to this group.
“They knew I was reading [their comments], and they knew that if I thought they were in danger I would act, and I think that was important to them,” he said.
Participants in the control group (27) waited 12 weeks and were then randomized to either EBT or SDW.
At the 12-week assessment, the e-mail therapy and SDW groups were combined into one “e-therapy” group and compared with the control group. The results showed that, while none of the control participants lost their eating disorder diagnosis, 18.6% of the e-therapy group did.
Assessments using the Bulimic Investigatory Test, Edinburgh, (BITE) severity and symptom scores showed a mean reduction in BITE severity score of 1.2 in the e-therapy group, compared with a reduction of 0.2 in the control group. Similarly, the mean reduction in the BITE symptom score was significantly greater in the e-therapy group (2.1 versus 0.3).
When asked about their desired body mass index, participants who had completed the e-mail therapy indicated that they were more willing to accept the idea of a higher BMI than were those participants in the control group.
There was a significant correlation between the number of words a participant wrote and the degree of symptom improvements in the e-mail bulimia therapy group only, Dr. Robinson said.
“It is hard to explain the response in the self-directed writing group, although there is quite a lot in the literature about the therapeutic efficacy of writing, and how it can lower depression scores,” he noted.
Although the study found no difference in outcome between EBT and SDW, there was a trend in favor of EBT.
E-mail therapy was well accepted by the participants, with 84% saying that they would be willing to engage in further therapy either online or face to face.
Migraines Affect One-Third Of Allergic Rhinitis Patients
SAN ANTONIO – More than 33% of patients with allergic rhinitis experience migraine headaches, compared with 3.5% of people without allergic rhinitis, according to a study by investigators in New York City.
The findings highlight a previously unrecognized potential target for migraine relief–that of histamine release in the nasal passage, said Nausika Prifti of Long Island College Hospital and one of the investigators in the study.
Oral antihistamine therapy fails to address this specific mechanism for relief of migraine pain, but nasal corticosteroids hold promise in this regard by addressing vasodilation and inflammation, she told this newspaper.
“Since there is a release of histamine in close proximity to the central nervous system, and histamine is a known releaser of nitric oxide, which is a key mediator to migraine headaches, there is more of a chance that nasal steroids might work on migraines by reducing the effects of histamines,” she said.
In a poster that she presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, Ms. Prifti and her colleagues outlined their survey of 133 patients who received care at an allergic rhinitis (AR) clinic.
A total of 76 patients met the criteria for AR and 57 did not. In the AR group, 26 patients (34%) had headaches meeting the criteria for migraines, whereas 2 patients (3.5%) in the non-AR group met these criteria.
Analysis of the data showed the risk of migraine headache was 14 times higher among patients with AR than among patients who did not have AR.
“We were surprised,” she said. “The doctors working with AR patients knew there was a trend toward migraine headaches, but they didn't expect it to be so high.”
Many patients thought they had sinus headaches and were not aware that they suffered migraines, she added.
SAN ANTONIO – More than 33% of patients with allergic rhinitis experience migraine headaches, compared with 3.5% of people without allergic rhinitis, according to a study by investigators in New York City.
The findings highlight a previously unrecognized potential target for migraine relief–that of histamine release in the nasal passage, said Nausika Prifti of Long Island College Hospital and one of the investigators in the study.
Oral antihistamine therapy fails to address this specific mechanism for relief of migraine pain, but nasal corticosteroids hold promise in this regard by addressing vasodilation and inflammation, she told this newspaper.
“Since there is a release of histamine in close proximity to the central nervous system, and histamine is a known releaser of nitric oxide, which is a key mediator to migraine headaches, there is more of a chance that nasal steroids might work on migraines by reducing the effects of histamines,” she said.
In a poster that she presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, Ms. Prifti and her colleagues outlined their survey of 133 patients who received care at an allergic rhinitis (AR) clinic.
A total of 76 patients met the criteria for AR and 57 did not. In the AR group, 26 patients (34%) had headaches meeting the criteria for migraines, whereas 2 patients (3.5%) in the non-AR group met these criteria.
Analysis of the data showed the risk of migraine headache was 14 times higher among patients with AR than among patients who did not have AR.
“We were surprised,” she said. “The doctors working with AR patients knew there was a trend toward migraine headaches, but they didn't expect it to be so high.”
Many patients thought they had sinus headaches and were not aware that they suffered migraines, she added.
SAN ANTONIO – More than 33% of patients with allergic rhinitis experience migraine headaches, compared with 3.5% of people without allergic rhinitis, according to a study by investigators in New York City.
The findings highlight a previously unrecognized potential target for migraine relief–that of histamine release in the nasal passage, said Nausika Prifti of Long Island College Hospital and one of the investigators in the study.
Oral antihistamine therapy fails to address this specific mechanism for relief of migraine pain, but nasal corticosteroids hold promise in this regard by addressing vasodilation and inflammation, she told this newspaper.
“Since there is a release of histamine in close proximity to the central nervous system, and histamine is a known releaser of nitric oxide, which is a key mediator to migraine headaches, there is more of a chance that nasal steroids might work on migraines by reducing the effects of histamines,” she said.
In a poster that she presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, Ms. Prifti and her colleagues outlined their survey of 133 patients who received care at an allergic rhinitis (AR) clinic.
A total of 76 patients met the criteria for AR and 57 did not. In the AR group, 26 patients (34%) had headaches meeting the criteria for migraines, whereas 2 patients (3.5%) in the non-AR group met these criteria.
Analysis of the data showed the risk of migraine headache was 14 times higher among patients with AR than among patients who did not have AR.
“We were surprised,” she said. “The doctors working with AR patients knew there was a trend toward migraine headaches, but they didn't expect it to be so high.”
Many patients thought they had sinus headaches and were not aware that they suffered migraines, she added.
Anal Incontinence Rates Similar for Men and Women
MONTREAL — Anal incontinence is four times more prevalent than previously thought, and it affects older men and women almost equally, according to what British researchers describe as the first systematic review of the prevalence of this disorder.
“Age, not gender, is the most important factor, and obstetric trauma does not have a major effect,” Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
The review of 29 studies with a total of 69,152 participants found an overall rate of anal incontinence of 3.5% in men and 4.5% in women across all age groups.
“It suggests that the 1% rate presumed by government agencies is an underestimate,” said Dr. Toozs-Hobson, a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Moreover, the effects of obstetric trauma could not be seen in this data, he said.
“It has long been thought that the incidence of anal incontinence is higher in women because trauma occurs to the anal sphincter during childbirth,” he said. “However, this study does not provide evidence that women under 60 years have significantly higher rates of incontinence, when compared with men of similar age.”
When data were broken down according to age, the prevalences for men and women under age 60 years were 0.8% and 1.6%, respectively. While the rates were much higher in people over age 60 years—they remained similar across the genders, at 5.1% for men and 6.2% for women, he said.
Since anal incontinence is increasingly becoming recognized as a significant cause of physical and psychological morbidity, these data have implications for community health care providers, Dr. Toozs-Hobson said.
MONTREAL — Anal incontinence is four times more prevalent than previously thought, and it affects older men and women almost equally, according to what British researchers describe as the first systematic review of the prevalence of this disorder.
“Age, not gender, is the most important factor, and obstetric trauma does not have a major effect,” Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
The review of 29 studies with a total of 69,152 participants found an overall rate of anal incontinence of 3.5% in men and 4.5% in women across all age groups.
“It suggests that the 1% rate presumed by government agencies is an underestimate,” said Dr. Toozs-Hobson, a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Moreover, the effects of obstetric trauma could not be seen in this data, he said.
“It has long been thought that the incidence of anal incontinence is higher in women because trauma occurs to the anal sphincter during childbirth,” he said. “However, this study does not provide evidence that women under 60 years have significantly higher rates of incontinence, when compared with men of similar age.”
When data were broken down according to age, the prevalences for men and women under age 60 years were 0.8% and 1.6%, respectively. While the rates were much higher in people over age 60 years—they remained similar across the genders, at 5.1% for men and 6.2% for women, he said.
Since anal incontinence is increasingly becoming recognized as a significant cause of physical and psychological morbidity, these data have implications for community health care providers, Dr. Toozs-Hobson said.
MONTREAL — Anal incontinence is four times more prevalent than previously thought, and it affects older men and women almost equally, according to what British researchers describe as the first systematic review of the prevalence of this disorder.
“Age, not gender, is the most important factor, and obstetric trauma does not have a major effect,” Philip Toozs-Hobson, M.D., reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
The review of 29 studies with a total of 69,152 participants found an overall rate of anal incontinence of 3.5% in men and 4.5% in women across all age groups.
“It suggests that the 1% rate presumed by government agencies is an underestimate,” said Dr. Toozs-Hobson, a consultant gynecologist at Birmingham (England) Women's Hospital.
Moreover, the effects of obstetric trauma could not be seen in this data, he said.
“It has long been thought that the incidence of anal incontinence is higher in women because trauma occurs to the anal sphincter during childbirth,” he said. “However, this study does not provide evidence that women under 60 years have significantly higher rates of incontinence, when compared with men of similar age.”
When data were broken down according to age, the prevalences for men and women under age 60 years were 0.8% and 1.6%, respectively. While the rates were much higher in people over age 60 years—they remained similar across the genders, at 5.1% for men and 6.2% for women, he said.
Since anal incontinence is increasingly becoming recognized as a significant cause of physical and psychological morbidity, these data have implications for community health care providers, Dr. Toozs-Hobson said.
Warn About Risk of Irritative Bladder Symptoms After TVT
MONTREAL — Patients undergoing tension-free vaginal tape procedures for stress urinary incontinence should know that although their quality of life will likely improve after the surgery, about one-fifth of them may experience postoperative irritative bladder symptoms, according to a Dutch expert.
In a study of 307 women undergoing a tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) procedure, 19% reported irritative bladder symptoms postsurgery, said Steven Schraffordt, M.D., of the Meander Medical Centre in Amersfoort, the Netherlands.
“All patients showed an improvement in quality of life … [but] … no specific [preoperative or operative] factors could be identified for changes in irritative symptoms after TVT,” he reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
Until now, the rate of irritative bladder symptoms after TVT procedures has been difficult to determine because previous studies have not controlled for patients who have undergone concomitant surgery, said Dr. Schraffordt. His study selected women who were being treated for stress urinary incontinence (SUI) alone and who had received no previous urogynecologic surgery or medications for bladder symptoms.
The multicenter prospective study required patients to answer two questionnaires prior to surgery and again 36 months later. The Urogenital Distress Inventory (UDI-6) measures stress incontinence and irritative and obstructive discomfort, while the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire (IIQ-7) measures the implications of urinary incontinence for normal daily functioning.
Three years postsurgery, 59 of the 307 patients (19%) reported irritative symptoms in response to the question: “Do you experience, and if so, how much are you bothered by: frequent urination and leakage related to feelings of urgency?” However, no preoperative or intraoperative differences could be identified between this group and the remaining 248 (81%) patients who reported no irritative symptoms.
Even those who reported worsened irritative symptoms had significantly improved quality of life scores on the IIQ-7, with a drop from preoperative score of 50.96 to postoperative score of 23.7. Patients who did not experience irritative symptoms had a more dramatic quality of life improvement with a preoperative QII-7 score of 59.3, which dropped to a postoperative score of 10.7. A comparison of both groups found a significantly greater improvement in the nonirritative patients.
“It is impossible to predict preoperatively which patient is more at risk for developing irritative symptoms after a TVT,” he commented. “Patients should therefore be informed preoperatively about the risk of developing these symptoms.”
MONTREAL — Patients undergoing tension-free vaginal tape procedures for stress urinary incontinence should know that although their quality of life will likely improve after the surgery, about one-fifth of them may experience postoperative irritative bladder symptoms, according to a Dutch expert.
In a study of 307 women undergoing a tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) procedure, 19% reported irritative bladder symptoms postsurgery, said Steven Schraffordt, M.D., of the Meander Medical Centre in Amersfoort, the Netherlands.
“All patients showed an improvement in quality of life … [but] … no specific [preoperative or operative] factors could be identified for changes in irritative symptoms after TVT,” he reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
Until now, the rate of irritative bladder symptoms after TVT procedures has been difficult to determine because previous studies have not controlled for patients who have undergone concomitant surgery, said Dr. Schraffordt. His study selected women who were being treated for stress urinary incontinence (SUI) alone and who had received no previous urogynecologic surgery or medications for bladder symptoms.
The multicenter prospective study required patients to answer two questionnaires prior to surgery and again 36 months later. The Urogenital Distress Inventory (UDI-6) measures stress incontinence and irritative and obstructive discomfort, while the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire (IIQ-7) measures the implications of urinary incontinence for normal daily functioning.
Three years postsurgery, 59 of the 307 patients (19%) reported irritative symptoms in response to the question: “Do you experience, and if so, how much are you bothered by: frequent urination and leakage related to feelings of urgency?” However, no preoperative or intraoperative differences could be identified between this group and the remaining 248 (81%) patients who reported no irritative symptoms.
Even those who reported worsened irritative symptoms had significantly improved quality of life scores on the IIQ-7, with a drop from preoperative score of 50.96 to postoperative score of 23.7. Patients who did not experience irritative symptoms had a more dramatic quality of life improvement with a preoperative QII-7 score of 59.3, which dropped to a postoperative score of 10.7. A comparison of both groups found a significantly greater improvement in the nonirritative patients.
“It is impossible to predict preoperatively which patient is more at risk for developing irritative symptoms after a TVT,” he commented. “Patients should therefore be informed preoperatively about the risk of developing these symptoms.”
MONTREAL — Patients undergoing tension-free vaginal tape procedures for stress urinary incontinence should know that although their quality of life will likely improve after the surgery, about one-fifth of them may experience postoperative irritative bladder symptoms, according to a Dutch expert.
In a study of 307 women undergoing a tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) procedure, 19% reported irritative bladder symptoms postsurgery, said Steven Schraffordt, M.D., of the Meander Medical Centre in Amersfoort, the Netherlands.
“All patients showed an improvement in quality of life … [but] … no specific [preoperative or operative] factors could be identified for changes in irritative symptoms after TVT,” he reported at the annual meeting of the International Continence Society.
Until now, the rate of irritative bladder symptoms after TVT procedures has been difficult to determine because previous studies have not controlled for patients who have undergone concomitant surgery, said Dr. Schraffordt. His study selected women who were being treated for stress urinary incontinence (SUI) alone and who had received no previous urogynecologic surgery or medications for bladder symptoms.
The multicenter prospective study required patients to answer two questionnaires prior to surgery and again 36 months later. The Urogenital Distress Inventory (UDI-6) measures stress incontinence and irritative and obstructive discomfort, while the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire (IIQ-7) measures the implications of urinary incontinence for normal daily functioning.
Three years postsurgery, 59 of the 307 patients (19%) reported irritative symptoms in response to the question: “Do you experience, and if so, how much are you bothered by: frequent urination and leakage related to feelings of urgency?” However, no preoperative or intraoperative differences could be identified between this group and the remaining 248 (81%) patients who reported no irritative symptoms.
Even those who reported worsened irritative symptoms had significantly improved quality of life scores on the IIQ-7, with a drop from preoperative score of 50.96 to postoperative score of 23.7. Patients who did not experience irritative symptoms had a more dramatic quality of life improvement with a preoperative QII-7 score of 59.3, which dropped to a postoperative score of 10.7. A comparison of both groups found a significantly greater improvement in the nonirritative patients.
“It is impossible to predict preoperatively which patient is more at risk for developing irritative symptoms after a TVT,” he commented. “Patients should therefore be informed preoperatively about the risk of developing these symptoms.”
Strep Throat Can Cause Anorexia Nervosa, OCD : Rarely, group A β-hemolytic streptococcal infection can lead to sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition (although this possibility is being investigated), but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A b-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, she said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things.
What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” Dr. Sokol explained.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7 to 16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. This was present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in only two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-induced anorexia could trigger use of prophylactic antibiotics (which is still under investigation) and to the importance of influenza vaccination, which can decrease vulnerability to strep, she said.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition (although this possibility is being investigated), but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A b-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, she said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things.
What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” Dr. Sokol explained.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7 to 16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. This was present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in only two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-induced anorexia could trigger use of prophylactic antibiotics (which is still under investigation) and to the importance of influenza vaccination, which can decrease vulnerability to strep, she said.
MONTREAL — Streptococcal pharyngitis may be a very occasional trigger for anorexia nervosa and other neuropsychiatric conditions and should be investigated in patients with sudden onset of psychiatric symptoms, Mae S. Sokol, M.D., said at an international conference sponsored by the Academy for Eating Disorders.
Identification of this cause of anorexia nervosa would not change treatment of the condition (although this possibility is being investigated), but it would alert patients and physicians to the need for more aggressive prevention and treatment of future strep infections, said Dr. Sokol of Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
Dr. Sokol explained that group A b-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) have been linked with several illnesses known collectively as PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus).
In addition to anorexia, the PANDAS classification includes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and tic disorders such as Tourette's syndrome.
It is well recognized that rheumatic fever and Sydenham's chorea are streptococcus-triggered autoimmune attacks on cardiac cells and cerebral neurons, respectively. It also is believed that PANDAS might be caused by similar attacks on basal ganglia cells, noted Dr. Sokol, who is also director of the eating disorders program at Children's Hospital in Omaha.
“We hypothesize that the immune system may look at the basal ganglia cells in the brain and mistakenly attack those cells, which may cause patients to have abnormal thoughts about food and weight,” she said in an interview at the conference.
Why this damage to basal ganglia cells manifests sometimes as anorexia and other times as OCD, Tourette's, or infantile autism is not known, she said.
“Since the basal ganglia are also involved with emotion, we think this area of the brain may be affected slightly differently with each condition. Another theory is that maybe we are seeing the same thing in children with PANDAS anorexia and children with PANDAS OCD—only in the PANDAS anorexia, the obsessions are about food and weight, whereas in PANDAS OCD they are about other things.
What's common in all these patients is a sense of perfectionism after they become ill,” Dr. Sokol explained.
She presented her study of 21 children and adolescents with possible PANDAS anorexia. The subjects met some or all of the following criteria:
▸ Presence of anorexia meeting DSM-IV criteria.
▸ Prepubertal onset of anorexia. This was present in 10 of the 21 participants. Participants ranged in age from 10.5 to 18 years at enrollment, with symptom onset at 9.7 to 16 years.
▸ Acute onset/exacerbation of their anorexia symptoms. This occurred in 19 of the 21 participants.
▸ Association with GABHS infection: anorexia onset or exacerbation within 1 day to 6 months of strep infection. This occurred in all participants.
▸ Increased psychiatric symptoms, not exclusively during the strep illness. This was present in all participants.
▸ Concomitant neurologic abnormalities, such as choreiform movements, motor hyperactivity, or adventitious movements. This occurred in only two participants but has been reported more frequently in PANDAS OCD.
Dr. Sokol said physicians who suspect PANDAS anorexia should make an effort to confirm laboratory strep tests, although at this stage treatment recommendations would be no different for this group.
However, identification of an infection-induced anorexia could trigger use of prophylactic antibiotics (which is still under investigation) and to the importance of influenza vaccination, which can decrease vulnerability to strep, she said.