DOI: 10.1002/bco2.70240 ISSN: 2688-4526

Chronic idiopathic urinary retention and Fowler's syndrome in women: A multidisciplinary framework for assessment and nonsurgical management

Sarah McRae, Caoimhe McLoughlin, Carolyn Davie, Claire Hentzen, Dani Coombe, Claire Todd, Clare Nicholson, Beatrice Garcin, Glenn Nielsen, Helen Simpson, Laura McWhirter, Helen Jinadu, Jalesh Panicker, Anne Sanderson, Alan Carson, Martine Cornillet, Miriam Gamble, Voula Granitsiosis, Sioned Hancock, Collete Haslam, Leila Heelas, Victoria Hulman, Emily Jay, Mahreen Pakzad, Caroline Selai, Natalia Vasquez, Louise Young, Jon Stone, Ingrid Hoeritzauer

Abstract

Chronic idiopathic urinary retention and Fowler's syndrome are a debilitating problem primarily affecting women, characterised by an inability to urinate in the absence of any identifiable structural or other cause. An increasingly wide range of multifactorial predisposing, precipitating, and perpetuating biopsychosocial factors are being recognised. This has led to interest in nonsurgical treatments that may complement existing surgical approaches. We reviewed existing literature on nonsurgical management and combined this information with collective multidisciplinary professional and lived experience, to produce a new definition of chronic idiopathic urinary retention (the Fife Definition) and a framework for the assessment and nonsurgical treatment for women with chronic idiopathic urinary retention. The article provides a stepped care approach to nonsurgical treatment including explanation and formulation, basic bladder healthcare, optimising catheterisation, management of relevant comorbidities, multidisciplinary treatment and additional treatment options and emerging therapies.

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