Tag Archives: UTI

Female sexual dysfunction in multiple sclerosis

How big is the problem? Can it be effectively managed?

Key points

  • Around 60–70% of women with MS experience sexual dysfunction, including problems with sexual desire and arousal, orgasm, lubrication, sexual satisfaction and pain.
  • The Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) is a useful online tool for assessing sexual dysfunction in women.
  • Prior to you annual MS review, try to consult recommended resources, such as the FSFI, and list the problems you need to discuss.
  • You may be able to address some of the problems yourself; however, you may need help from your MS team to manage some MS symptoms that affect your sexual functioning.

Prevalence and impact on quality of life

Sexual function is an important aspect of quality of life, and sexual dysfunction in women with MS lessens satisfaction with life, impacting mood and relationships. This affects not only the woman’s own quality of life but her partner’s life as well. Studies and meta-analyses of global prevalence have shown that around 60–70% of women with MS experience sexual dysfunction.1 − 3 Although it is among the most common complaints of people with MS,1 sexual dysfunction is understudied in both sexes. Less research has been conducted into sexual dysfunction in women with MS, however, compared to men with MS. This is most likely because men with MS benefit from the large body of research into sexual dysfunction outside of MS and have well-established treatments for erectile dysfunction.

Screening for female sexual dysfunction

An example of the MS community neglecting both female and male sexual dysfunction is the observation that the Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), the most used quality-of-life patient-related outcome measure, lacks a question on sexual function.

You can assess whether or not you have sexual dysfunction by downloading and completing the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI). Based on results from this standardised questionnaire, two out of three women with MS in one study had sexual dysfunction.1 This included problems with sexual desire and arousal (38.6%), orgasm (37.3%), lubrication (23.7%), sexual satisfaction (23.4%) and pain (16.9%).

Your annual review

When preparing for your annual MS review, I recommend completing the FSFI and listing all the problems you think your medical team needs to address. I would also recommend you read the MS Trust’s booklet, ‘Sex, intimacy and MS: a guide for women’; it is exceptional, well thought-out, and a must-read for all women with MS, whether or not you have sexual dysfunction.

From comments made on MS-Selfie, I know that many women with MS worry that sexual intercourse increases the risk of urinary tract infection. Prophylactic urinary antiseptics can help here; you will need to discuss this with your neurologist and/or family doctor to be given a prescription.

Female sexual dysfunction is a tractable problem that needs to be addressed in routine clinical practice and managed accordingly. So, if you are a woman with MS and have sexual dysfunction, don’t simply accept it as your new normal. Work out what your problems are and try to address them yourself; there is a lot you can do for yourself. For many problems, you may need help from your MS team; these include managing the impact of MS symptoms such as depression, anxiety, fatigue, pain, spasticity and bladder or bowel dysfunction. If necessary, patients should be referred to specialist services; that said, few NHS clinics in the UK specialise in female sexual dysfunction.

Cognitive biases

Some time ago, my MS nurse specialist commented that I tended to ask men with MS, but not women, about sexual dysfunction – most likely a cognitive bias on my part, driven by the fact that licensed treatments for erectile dysfunction are available only for men. Now, time permitting, I ask all my patients about sexual dysfunction during their annual review. Sadly, very few admit to having problems, possibly because they feel uncomfortable discussing such matters face-to-face in the clinic when students and visitors are often present. This is why using a pre-clinic screening questionnaire may be a better way of asking about sexual dysfunction.

Priorities for the future

A three-step series of multinational surveys conducted among more than 5000 people living with MS, health care providers, researchers and patient advocacy groups aimed to ascertain the respondents’ priorities for future research in women’s health in MS.4 In the final stages of the study, sexual dysfunction was identified as one of the most important topics for research, after menopause. The priority research questions for sexual dysfunction were to determine the most effective strategies for managing issues around sexual intimacy, including those related to low sexual desire, changes in physical function and MS symptoms.

Many of the issues underlying female sexual dysfunction in MS can be addressed by the MS team, but they will require a much longer consultation than a simple one-liner in an annual review. The real need, in my view, is the establishment of dedicated clinics for female sexual dysfunction, with the necessary multidisciplinary input to address all the problems.

References

  1. Nazari, F et al.  Sexual dysfunction in women with multiple sclerosis: prevalence and impact on quality of life. BMC Urology 2020;20:15.
  2. Salari, N, et al. The global prevalence of sexual dysfunction in women with multiple sclerosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Neurol Sci 2023;44:59−66. doi: 10.1007/s10072-022-06406-z.
  3. Yazdani, A et al. Prevalence and risk of developing sexual dysfunction in women with multiple sclerosis (MS): a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Womens Health 2023;23:352. doi: 10.1186/s12905-023-02501-1.
  4. Ross, L et al. Priority setting: women’s health topics in multiple sclerosis. Front Neurol 2024;15. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1355817.

Detecting and preventing urinary tract infections

Frequent and severe urinary tract infections (UTIs) increase the likelihood that MS will progress. I recommend regular dipstick testing at home, as part of your MS self-management, to increase the chances of early detection and treatment of a UTI.

Urinary tract infection and disease progression

Infections, both viral and bacterial, are a known trigger of relapse. Frequent and severe urinary tract infections (UTIs) increase the likelihood that your MS will progress. This is why it is important to improve the management of bladder problems in people with MS to prevent or reduce urinary tract infections. You can do this in several ways, such as increasing the frequency of ISC.

Drinking plenty of liquids to flush the bladder reduces infection rates. Changing the pH of your urine by drinking citric acid (citro soda or lemonade) also helps. Making your urine more alkaline or more acidic may work, depending on the bacterial species colonising your bladder. Cranberry extract, for example, contains proanthocyanidins, a substance that reduces bacterial colonisation of the bladder. (You need to use the extract and not the juice because the proanthocyanidin concentration in the juice is too low to have an effect.)

Another very effective option (but infrequently used) is a bladder instillation with a liquid containing sodium hyaluronate (Cystistat), which replaces the glycosaminoglycan layer, or glycocalyx, of the bladder wall. This makes it difficult for bacteria to stick to the bladder wall to cause infections and is one way of preventing bacterial biofilms, or slime, from forming. Biofilms are a significant problem because they prevent antibiotics from reaching the bacteria to kill them and act as a breeding place for recurrent infections.

Urinary antiseptics are antibiotics, given in low concentrations, that may help to reduce urinary tract infection rates. They are typically administered in tablet form; they work by being concentrated by the kidneys and making the urine antiseptic, which helps to prevent or treat urinary tract infections. The agents I use currently are trimethoprim, cephalexin and nitrofurantoin. (Methenamine, another urinary antiseptic, is not readily available in the UK due to supply issues.) Cycling their use, every 3 ̶ 4 months, prevents the bladder bacteria from becoming resistant to a specific antibacterial. We have stopped using nalidixic acid and other drugs in the oxolinic acid class because they are associated with tendonitis and tendon ruptures.

Interpretation of urine dipstick results

Early detection of urinary tract infections (UTIs) means that they can be treated promptly to prevent symptomatic infection or complications such as pyelonephritis (kidney infection) and septicaemia (a common cause of death in people with advanced MS). Dipstick testing can be carried out at home, as part of self-management of your MS. I recommend doing dipstick monitoring once or twice a week, not daily. If positive, you must drop off a clean urine sample to your healthcare provider for proper laboratory analysis (microscopy, culture and sensitivity). This is to confirm the presence of a UTI, to culture and isolate the bacteria causing the infection, and to test the sensitivity of the bacteria to antibiotics. You must send your urine specimen for analysis before you start antibiotics. 

For UTI monitoring, the leukocyte and nitrite tests are the most important, with backup from the protein, blood and pH tests. The guidance in the table below explains how to interpret some of the key dipstick test results relevant to UTIs and what the different readings on a typical urine dipstick mean. You need to wait up to 2 minutes to read the results; if in doubt, take a picture of the test strip with your mobile phone and email it to your HCP for interpretation.

Dipstick results

Guidance to help you interpret the dipstick results relevant to urinary tract infection (UTI). You should wait for up to 2 minutes before reading the results (2 minutes for leukocytes, at least 60 seconds for other results shown here).
*If you have been treated with alemtuzumab, new-onset proteinuria in the presence of blood may indicate Goodpasture’s syndrome, a rare autoimmune complication of alemtuzumab treatment. Please consult your HCP.
UTI, urinary tract infection.

The image below shows what the different readings on a typical urine dipstick mean; the readings for white blood cells, nitrite, protein, pH and blood are important for detecting the presence of a UTI (more information is in the Table above). Further details about readings for urobilinogen,  specific gravity, ketone levels, bilirubin and glucose are available in my newsletter entitled How to interpret a urine dipstick result.

An example of results from a urine dipstick test; the readings most relevant to interpreting urinary tract infections are white blood cells, nitrite, protein, pH and blood. Information about additional results from dipstick testing are available in my newsletter entitled How to interpret a urine dipstick result.