Urinary Incontinence

On today’s episode, we visit with Dr. Kyle Wohlrab, who is an associate professor and urogynecologist at Brown University / Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island. He takes us through the basics of urinary incontinence.

Urinary incontinence is quite common: almost 1/3 of women in their lifetime. The Women’s Preventive Services Initiative even recommends annual standardized incontinence screening for women annually.

The mechanisms of incontinence include:
Stress - leakage with Valsalva (sneeze/laugh/cough/activity). Generally in small volumes.
Urge - aka overactive bladder; spasms or overactivity of bladder detrusor muscle that can prompt large volume leakage.
Mixed - a combination of the above; often one of the above types is “predominant.”

We review in the podcast many of the most important parts of a history and workup, but the most important aspect are the patient’s goals with respect to incontinence. This also will guide our therapy. Childbirth, obesity, and activities involving heavy weight bearing are some common risk factors.

One of the tests that can easily be performed, but many have limited experience with, is a simple cystometrogram. Essentially, one backfills the bladder. If during filling, one sees a rise in the meniscus, this is suggestive of detrusor overactivity. After filling with 200-300cc,, one can do a filled cough stress test to evaluate for stress incontinence.

Treatments vary by type of incontinence, but can be broken down into three categories for each type:
Stress - pelvic floor PT, vaginal inserts, and surgical therapy — midurethral sling, Burch urethropexy, urethral bulking.
Urge - pelvic floor PT and behavioral modification, medial therapies, and surgical therapies — neurostimulators.

For medical therapies for urge incontinence, antimuscarinic therapy is generally first line. Oxybutynin and trospium are the most commonly used medications in this class. Recall that antimuscarinic drugs have the “slow down” side effects of dry mouth/dry eyes, constipation, abdominal pain, and sedation. Newer medications in this class can have fewer side effects but can have difficulty with insurance coverage. Trospium is the newest medication that also doesn’t cross the blood-brain barrier, limiting neurologic side effects — especially useful in the elderly!

Beta agonists are another option for medical therapy with mirabegron. Rather than acting on muscarinic receptors, these act on beta agonists. These thus should be avoided in patients with uncontrolled hypertension.

When should someone refer to urogynecology? Dr. Wohlrab’s advice is to refer once someone has failed a line of therapy, or when patients begin looking for surgical therapy. Especially after listening today, we hope you’re comfortable with this workup and treatment!

Further reading from the OBG Project:
Urinary Incontinence – How to Make the Diagnosis in Your Office and When to Refer
Treating Urinary Incontinence Without Surgery: Options and Pearls
Prolapse and Stress Incontinence: Burch Procedure vs Midurethral Sling
Surgery for Urinary Incontinence – When the Sling’s the Thing

The Menstrual Cycle

On today’s episode we welcome Dr. Jay Huber. Jay is a 3rd year fellow in reproductive endocrinology and infertility at the Warren Alpert Brown School of Medicine, and today he demystifies the HPO axis, the menstrual cycle, and all of the hormonal interplay.

It’s always helpful to follow along to one of the “menstrual cycle” diagrams, one of which we include here for reference:

Wikipedia

As Dr. Huber reminds us, the ovary really runs the show due to its negative feedback effect on the hypothalamus. However, thinking top down:

  • GnRH is release from the hypothalamus in a pulsatile fashion, triggering release of FSH and/or LH, depending on the timing of the cycle.

  • In the follicular phase of the ovary, FSH stimulates development of a dominant follicle. Once the dominant follicle is large enough, it produces a high enough level of estrogen to give positive feedback to the hypothalamus. Further GnRH is released, promoting preferential LH release downstream, until an LH surge is triggered, giving us the ovulation event on day 14.

  • After this, the levels of LH and FSH decline in response to negative estrogen feedback, in the luteal phase of the ovary.

  • Simultaneously, the estrogen produced by the dominant follicle in the ovarian follicular phase above causes downstream effects on the endometrium, marking the proliferative phase here of endometrial growth in preparation for implantation.

  • Once the follicle releases the oocyte, the follicular cells become the corpus luteum, which then produces progesterone. Progesterone matures the endometrium to be ‘pro-gestational’ for implantation and the secretory phase of endometrial maturation occurs.

  • If no fertilization event occurs, the corpus luteum degenerates, and by day 23-25, progesterone withdrawal results in shedding of the endometrial lining. If a fertilization event occurs, beta-hCG prompts the corpus luteum to continue to make progesterone.

Further reading from the OBG Project:
Get updates on this and more content, as well as other awesome features for FREE if you’re a PGY-4 — sign up for OBG First!
Managing AUB-O
PCOS: Making the Diagnosis

Vision Changes in Pregnancy

Today we are joined by Dr. Ben Young. Ben is an ophthalmology resident at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut, and is sharing with us a common complaint that we know very little about - the eye in pregnancy!

Ben also hosts Eyes For Ears, an educational podcast and flashcard reference for ophthalmology residents. If you happen to know any vision sciences students or residents, let them know about it!

We start out talking about the “ocular vital signs,” which are:
- Visual Acuity
- Pupils (“swinging light test”)
- Intraocular pressure
- Visual Fields
- Extra-ocular movements

Image copyright of FOAMCast

The most common reasons for ophthalmology issues in pregnancy relate to either 1) vision changes requiring a new prescription, or 2) dry eye. However, don’t forget some key pearls:

- Monocular (single eye) double vision — dry eye. Binocular (both eye) double vision — badness!
- A Snellen chart and a flashlight are the best tools you have to help out a consultant.
- Check out this video on how to perform a swinging flashlight test.

Further reading from the OBG Project:
Get updates on this and more content, as well as other awesome features for FREE if you’re a PGY-4 — sign up for OBG First!
Is Cataract Surgery in Women Associated with Decreased Mortality?

Hypertension and Pregnancy Trio

We’ve had an overwhelming response to our Espresso episode on acute treatment of severe hypertension in pregnancy, so today we have a special triple episode release on pregnancy and hypertension! We dive into ACOG PB 202 on Preeclampsia and Gestational Hypertension, and ACOG PB 203 on Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy (membership required for both).

In our first episode, we dive into risk factors and definitions to set the stage. Recall several risk factors that may raise your suspicion for these disorders:
- Nulliparity
- Multiple gestation
- Chronic hypertension
- History of hypertensive disorder of pregnancy in previous pregnancy
- Pregestational or gestational diabetes mellitus
- Thrombophilia, Anti-phospholipid syndrome, or SLE
- Chronic kidney disease
- Advanced maternal age > 35 years
- Obesity (BMI > 30) or obstructive sleep apnea
- Conception via assisted reproductive technology

In episodes 2 and 3, we dive into the specific definitions and management for each hypertensive disorder. Here are our show notes in table format; we hope that this helps you with your own review!

And in closing, a few postpartum/future health pearls to consider:
- With a history of any of these hypertensive disorders, baby aspirin is indicated in future pregnancies beginning at 12 weeks gestation to reduce risk or delay onset of preeclampsia.
- Women with a history of preeclampsia have 3-4x higher lifetime risk of hypertension, and 2x lifetime risk of heart disease and stroke, thus its important to ask about these even with just the annual physical.
- Best available evidence suggest NSAIDs are OK to use postpartum for patients with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.
- Best available evidence also supports use of parenteral magnesium for seizure prophylaxis in patients who develop any of these disorders during the postpartum period (generally onsets within first week, but has been reported up to 8 weeks after delivery!).

Further reading from the OBG Project:
And get updates on this and more content, as well as other awesome features for FREE if you’re a PGY-4 — sign up for OBG First!
Diagnosing Preeclampsia: Key Definitions and ACOG Guidelines
ACOG Preeclampsia Guidelines: Antenatal Management and Timing of Delivery
Aspirin Treatment for Women at Risk for Preeclampsia: ACOG and USPSTF Guidelines
Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy: Diagnosis and BP Measurement
Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy: Evaluation and Management
The 2017 AHA/ACC Blood Pressure Guidelines
#GrandRounds: Does Hypertension in Pregnancy Predict Hypertension in Later Life?

Herpes Simplex

Today we get back on track in our STI saga with herpes simplex!

Clinically speaking, the most important thing to remember is the treatment of HSV, which is summed up nicely in the CDC guidelines. That said, we’ve tried to put together a little table for ease of reference here.

In pregnancy, suppressive therapy should be initiated at 36 weeks with one of two regimens: acyclovir 400mg TID or valacyclovir 500mg BID.

We also don’t discuss much about disseminated HSV infection or neonatal HSV infection in today’s podcast. These can be devastating to adults and neonates alike, but we will touch on the neonatal aspect in a future episode on TORCH infections.

Find additional resources at The OBGProject!
- STD Screening in Pregnancy
- Ulcerative Genital Conditions in HIV-positive Patients