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Neurogenic LUT Dysfunction
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=== Other conditions === *Hyperthyroidism ** Can have incomplete emptying, frequency, straining * Schizophrenia ** Can have involuntary bladder contractions * Gastroparesis * Isaacs syndrome * Wernicke encephalopathy ** Caused by a deficiency in thiamine (vitamin B1) ** The two major clinical manifestations of thiamine deficiency involve the cardiovascular and neurologic systems, with the latter manifesting in general as a peripheral neuropathy ** Can have urgency incontinence ** Management: thiamine replacement * '''Myasthenia gravis''' ** Autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies to acetylcholine nicotinic receptors. This leads to neuromuscular blockade and subsequent weakness in a variety of striated muscle groups. ** Can have urinary incontinence from poor tone of sphincter or urinary retention from detrusor areflexia *** '''Increased risk of urinary incontinence even after a well-performed transurethral or open prostatectomy.''' * Systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) ** Disease of the connective tissue characterized by thickening and fibrosis of the skin, abnormalities of the small arteries, and involvement of the gastrointestinal tract, heart, lung, and kidneys. ** Can have storage and voiding symptoms * Ehlers-Danlos syndrome ** Inherited abnormalities of connective tissue ** Main clinical manifestations are skin fragility, skin hyperextensibility, and joint mobility ** No characteristic pattern of dysfunction. * Corticobasal degeneration * Sacral coccygeal teratoma * Subacute combined degeneration * Willams-Beuren syndrome * Amyloidosis * Machado-Joseph disease * Congenital adrenal hyperplasia * Benign joint hypermobility syndrome * Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
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