In 2011, the American Urological Association released consensus-based guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of interstitial cystitis. Further reviews of multiple studies and guidelines have updated these recommendations. They include treatments ranging from conservative to more invasive: • First-line treatments – education, dietary modification, exercise,
physical therapy, first-line analgesics (
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug with paracetamol and gastric protection), stress management,
support groups, and
psychotherapy including
cognitive behavioral therapy • Second-line treatments – oral medications (amitriptyline,
cimetidine), bladder instillations (DMSO,
heparinor
lidocaine) • Third-line treatments – treatment of Hunner's lesions (laser,
fulguration or
triamcinolone injection), hydrodistention (low pressure, short duration) • Fourth-line treatments –
botulinum toxin (BTX-A),
neuromodulation (
sacral or
pudendal nerve) • Fifth-line treatments –
cyclosporine A • Sixth-line treatments – surgical intervention (
urinary diversion, augmentation,
cystectomy) The American Urological Association guidelines also listed several discontinued treatments, including long-term oral antibiotics, intravesical
bacillus Calmette Guerin, intravesical
resiniferatoxin), high-pressure and long-duration hydrodistention, and systemic
glucocorticoids. Recent studies show pressure on pelvic trigger points can relieve symptoms. The relief achieved by bladder distensions is only temporary (weeks or months), so is not viable as a long-term treatment for IC/BPS. The proportion of people with IC/BPS who experience relief from hydrodistention is currently unknown and evidence for this modality is limited by a lack of properly controlled studies. The disadvantages of installations are severe pain in the urethra, caused by the catheter that is used to administer the instillation, bladder pain and the fact that most installations need to be held in the bladder for at least two hours, whereas some patients have to urinate (far) more frequent than once every two hours. This causes severe pain and/or affects the treatment because the instillation did not sit in the bladder long enough. About DMSO: 50% solution of DMSO had the potential to create irreversible
muscle contraction. However, a lesser solution of 25% was found to be reversible. Long-term use of DMSO is questionable, as its mechanism of action is not fully understood though DMSO is thought to inhibit mast cells and may have anti-inflammatory, muscle-relaxing, and analgesic effects. Individuals with interstitial cystitis often experience an increase in symptoms when they consume certain foods and beverages. Avoidance of these potential trigger foods and beverages such as tomatoes, cranberries, caffeine-containing beverages including coffee, tea, and soda,
alcoholic beverages,
chocolate,
citrus fruits,
hot peppers, and
artificial sweeteners may be helpful in alleviating symptoms. The foundation of therapy is a modification of diet to help people avoid those foods which can further irritate the damaged bladder wall. The mechanism by which dietary modification benefits people with IC is unclear. Integration of neural signals from pelvic organs may mediate the effects of diet on symptoms of IC.
Medications Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug and paracetamol and gastric protection combined with other conservative measures can be an effect first-line treatment. although a patent exists for use of duloxetine in the context of IC, and is known to relieve neuropathic pain.
Pelvic floor treatments Urologic pelvic pain syndromes, such as IC/BPS and CP/CPPS, are characterized by pelvic muscle tenderness, and symptoms may be reduced with pelvic myofascial physical therapy. This may leave the pelvic area in a sensitized condition, resulting in a loop of muscle tension and heightened neurological feedback (
neural wind-up), a form of
myofascial pain syndrome. Current protocols, such as the
Wise–Anderson Protocol, largely focus on stretches to release overtensed muscles in the pelvic or anal area (commonly referred to as
trigger points), physical therapy to the area, and progressive relaxation therapy to reduce causative stress. Pelvic floor dysfunction is a fairly new area of specialty for physical therapists worldwide. The goal of therapy is to relax and lengthen the pelvic floor muscles, rather than to tighten and/or strengthen them as is the goal of therapy for people with urinary incontinence. Thus, traditional exercises such as
Kegel exercises, which are used to strengthen pelvic muscles, can provoke pain and additional muscle tension. A specially trained physical therapist can provide direct, hands on evaluation of the muscles, both externally and internally. A therapeutic wand can also be used to perform pelvic floor muscle myofascial release to provide relief.
Surgery Surgery is rarely used for IC/BPS. Surgical intervention is very unpredictable, and is considered a treatment of last resort for severe refractory cases of interstitial cystitis.
Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation stimulators have also been used, with varying degrees of success. Percutaneous sacral nerve root stimulation was able to produce statistically significant improvements in several parameters, including pain. There is tentative evidence that
acupuncture may help pain associated with IC/BPS as part of other treatments. Despite a scarcity of controlled studies on alternative medicine and IC/BPS, "rather good results have been obtained" when acupuncture is combined with other treatments.
Biofeedback, a relaxation technique aimed at helping people control functions of the
autonomic nervous system, has shown some benefit in controlling pain associated with IC/BPS as part of a multimodal approach that may also include medication or hydrodistention of the bladder. ==Prognosis==