Interstitial Cystitis — When Cultures Are Negative But Symptoms Are Real
Interstitial cystitis (IC) produces UTI-like symptoms with negative cultures — frustrating both patient and doctor. At Nature’s Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Clinic in Belmont, Perth, Dr. Yang addresses the bladder pattern and pelvic floor contributors underlying IC.
Do These Symptoms Sound Familiar?
- Bladder pressure or pain
- Frequent urination day and night
- Pain worsening with full bladder
- Negative urine cultures
- Pain with intercourse
- Symptoms worse with stress
- Specific food triggers
- Pain referring to pelvis or lower back
- Reduced quality of life
- Sleep disturbance from frequency
Why IC Persists Despite Standard Care
Standard treatments — pentosan polysulfate, amitriptyline, bladder instillations — help some patients. Many continue with symptoms. The condition is complex, often involving bladder lining dysfunction, neurogenic inflammation, and pelvic floor contributions.
Classical Chinese medicine identifies three contributing patterns. Pattern-matched treatment addresses local bladder, descending heat, and neuromuscular contributions.
Your Treatment Timeline
- Acupuncture 1–2× weekly
- Pattern assessment
- Chinese herbal formula — pattern-matched
- Continue prescribed medications
- Identify food triggers
- Pain frequency reducing
- Urinary frequency normalising
- Sleep improving
- Pelvic floor tension easing
- Formula adjusted
- Sustained symptom reduction
- Constitutional rebuilding
- Reduced medication need
- Long-term lifestyle patterns
- Periodic maintenance
Supporting Research
- Identify and avoid trigger foods
- Adequate hydration with non-irritating fluids
- Stress management
- Pelvic floor physiotherapy if relevant
- Address sleep quality
- Trigger foods (often: caffeine, alcohol, citrus, tomato, spicy)
- Bladder irritants
- Excessive water-loading
- Tight clothing
- Self-prescribing antibiotics for IC
Frequently Asked Questions
How distinguish from UTI?
IC has negative cultures repeatedly. Standard urology evaluation distinguishes.
Continue medications?
Yes — combined approach often most effective.
Specific diet?
Bladder-irritant avoidance helps many. Pattern-specific guidance from assessment.
Sexual activity?
Often affected. Pelvic floor work and constitutional treatment address this.
Pelvic floor connection?
Strong — many IC patients have pelvic floor dysfunction. Combined treatment helpful.
Prognosis?
Substantial improvement realistic for most. Sustained low-symptom state achievable.
