Treatment may involve a combination of medicine, lifestyle changes, surgery, and other methods. There is no single known treatment. It may take some time to find the right combination of treatments for you.
Medicine choices include:
- Pain medicine. These may be used for a short time to help ease discomfort.
- Antispasmodic medicines. These may help relax the bladder muscles. This may decrease the need to urinate.
- Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). These may help reduce inflammation and ease pain.
- Antihistamines. These may help reduce inflammation and ease pain if your doctor thinks an allergic reaction is the cause.
- Antidepressants. In low doses, these may block pain, ease bladder spasms, and help ease symptoms.
- Pentosan polysulfate sodium and similar medicines. These can help ease pain by building and restoring the protective coating of the bladder tissue.
- Bladder instillation. In some cases, medicine may be flushed directly into the bladder using a catheter.
Other treatments may include:
- Biofeedback. This treatment uses sensors placed on your belly (abdomen) to let you see signals given off by your bladder muscles. This may help you control your bladder muscles and reduce symptoms.
- Electrical stimulation. Electrical signals may help block nerve sensations to and from the bladder. This may improve blood flow and strengthen pelvic muscles.
- Surgery. For severe cases that don't get better with other treatments, surgery may be advised.
- Botulinum toxin. This can be injected into the bladder lining to relax the muscles of the bladder.
- Cystoscopy with hydrodistention. This procedure is done in the operating room. It fills the bladder with water to stretch it to full capacity. It often helps with bladder pain and frequency.
Lifestyle changes include:
- Change in diet. This involves not eating foods that irritate your bladder and make your symptoms worse. These may include alcohol, citrus fruits, spicy food, chocolate, and caffeine.
- Bladder retraining. This involves holding urine for longer and longer periods. The goal is to stretch the bladder and increase the amount of urine the bladder can control.
- Stress management. Stress doesn't cause interstitial cystitis. But any type of chronic pain can be helped by learning ways to help manage stress. Exercise may help, too.