AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to systematically review literature on urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome flares, focusing on terminology, symptoms, triggers, management, and their impact on quality of life.
  • A search through 6 medical databases led to the identification of 59 relevant articles, revealing that flares significantly increase pain but lack comprehensive data on frequency, duration, and biological mechanisms.
  • The findings indicate that flare experiences are impactful yet poorly understood, suggesting a need for more empirical research to address these gaps.

Article Abstract

Purpose: We sought to systematically review and summarize the peer-reviewed literature on urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome flares, including their terminology, manifestation, perceived triggers, management and prevention strategies, impact on quality of life, and insights into pathophysiologic mechanisms, as a foundation for future empirical research.

Materials And Methods: We searched 6 medical databases for articles related to any aspect of symptom exacerbations for interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome and chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome. A total of 1486 abstracts and 398 full-text articles were reviewed, and data were extracted by at least 2 individuals.

Results: Overall, we identified 59 articles, including 36 qualitative, cross-sectional, or case-control; 15 cohort-based; and 8 experimental articles. The majority of studies described North American patients with confirmed diagnoses. "Flare" was a commonly used term, but additional terminology (eg, exacerbation) was also used. Most flares involved significant increases in pain intensity, but less data were available on flare frequency and duration. Painful, frequent, long-lasting, and unpredictable flares were highly impactful, even over and above participants' nonflare symptoms. A large number of perceived triggers (eg, diet, stress) and management/prevention strategies (eg, analgesics, thermal therapy, rest) were proposed by participants, but few had empirical support. In addition, few studies explored underlying biologic mechanisms.

Conclusions: Overall, we found that flares are painful and impactful, but otherwise poorly understood in terms of manifestation (frequency and duration), triggers, treatment, prevention, and pathophysiology. These summary findings provide a foundation for future flare-related research and highlight gaps that warrant additional empirical studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11037930PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JU.0000000000003820DOI Listing

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