IMV/Virus Pain Syndrome (IC/BPS) has a very high rate of misdiagnosis (more than 90 per cent), mainly because routine examinations do not detect the cause. The fibrosis of the bladder walls of patients with IMEs, accompanied by a reduction in bladder capacity, is characterized by pressure or swollen pain in urine, urine, bladder or pelvis areas. In general, pain in the shamebone is accompanied by increased urine storage periods and urination frequency symptoms, requiring suspicion of the possibility of the disease, as well as a change in the bladder mucous membrane after anaesthesia has been extended.
The expansion of bladder water is both diagnostic and therapeutic, and its effect is to:
1. Diagnosis: bladder expansion is a more widespread method of diagnostic treatment currently used in the clinical field, with pre-extension bladder lenses excluding other causes that can cause symptoms (e.g. rock, tumor). Anesthesia expands and the bladder lens is seen with blood on the lower point of the bladder mucous membrane or with a Hunner ulcer. According to the bladder lens, IC can be classified as an ulcer type (Hunner ulcer) and a non-ulcer type. The ulcer type is one or more small ulcer at the bottom of the bladder or the side wall, with a detection rate of about 10 per cent. The non-ulcer type is shown as a skeletal skeletal haemorrhage point following water expansion, which is found in 90 per cent of patients.
2. Concurrent treatment: The ulcer can be diagnosed while the ulcer can be removed from the bladder for therapeutic purposes.
3. Provide timing for later treatment: it takes time to recover after bladder expansion treatment and to provide treatment opportunities for possible later injection treatment;
After the surgery, it improves the pain, urination, etc.
In addition, there are bladder injection methods (common bladder injection drugs are sodium transparent acid, with limited therapeutic effects such as hepatin, Lidocaine, sodium carbonate, etc.); cytological regulation therapy; and care to keep the diet low during treatment to avoid hot foods such as peppers and peppers. At the same time, care needs to be taken to maintain local hygiene and to change underpants in order to avoid infection.