Pain Forum
Volume 8, Issue 3 , Pages 151-153, Autumn 1999

The battle for the bladder in interstitial cystitis:

Neurodestruction versus neuromodulation

  • Daniel Brookoff

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Daniel Brookoff, MD, PhD, Department of Medical Education, Methodist Hospital, 1265 Union Avenue, Memphis, TN 38104.

Department of Medical Education, Methodist Hospital, and the Methodist Comprehensive Pain Institute, Memphis, Tennessee

Interstitial cystitis is a visceral pain syndrome whose incidence and severity have long been underestimated. Classifying it as a “complex visceral pain syndrome” rather than as a “disease of the bladder” is justified based on evidence that the driving process behind this illness is neurogenic inflammation, which is often not restricted to the bladder. This reclassification should help us understand that many of the current urologic therapies for interstitial cystitis can cause a worsening of the syndrome and should lead practitioners to offer rational pain-relieving treatments to their patients early on in the course of their illness.

Key words: interstitial cystitis, pain, neurogenic inflammation, visceral pain, neurostimulation

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 This work was supported by a grant from the Methodist Hospitals Foundation.

PII: S1082-3174(99)70026-7

doi:10.1016/S1082-3174(99)70026-7

Pain Forum
Volume 8, Issue 3 , Pages 151-153, Autumn 1999