Aims of study. Recently, percutaneous neurostimulation of the posterior tibial nerve has been introduced as a less invasive form of neuromodulation for the treatment for urgency, frequency and urge incontinence. Aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of this treatment in detrusor hyperreflexia. Methods. 14 patients (6 women, 8 men) were enrolled in a 12 week prospective study. Mean age was 52 years. Patients were affected by detrusor hyperreflexia secondary to multiple sclerosis (4), mielitis (5), incomplete spinal cord injury (2), stroke (1) or Parkinson's disease (2). All patients had urgency/frequency and urge incontinence episodes. A needle was inserted 5 cm cephalad to the medial malleolus and connected to a stimulation device for 30 minutes at weekly ses sions (pulse width 200 microsec; frequency 20 Hz; adjustable current 0-10mA). At 0 and 12 weeks the following parameters were recorded: voiding frequency, the number of leakage episodes per 24 h and quality of life score (SF-36 and I-QoL). Results. 9/14 patients (64%) continued the treatment on a patient specific tapering protocol, having showed a clinical improvement >50%. Conclusions. Percutaneous afferent stimulation of the posterior tibial nerve is an effective, non-invasive option to treat detrusor hyperreflexia. Improvement was seen in clinical parameters as well as in subjective QoL-data.

FINAZZI AGRO', E., Petta, F., D'Amico, A., Miano, R., Musco, S., Micali, F., et al. (2003). Trattamento dell'incontinenza urinaria neurogena per mezzo della stimolazione elettrica percutanea del nervo tibiale posteriore. NUOVA RIVISTA DI NEUROLOGIA, 13(2), 66-70.

Trattamento dell'incontinenza urinaria neurogena per mezzo della stimolazione elettrica percutanea del nervo tibiale posteriore

FINAZZI AGRO', ENRICO;MIANO, ROBERTO;MICALI, FRANCESCO;CALTAGIRONE, CARLO
2003-01-01

Abstract

Aims of study. Recently, percutaneous neurostimulation of the posterior tibial nerve has been introduced as a less invasive form of neuromodulation for the treatment for urgency, frequency and urge incontinence. Aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of this treatment in detrusor hyperreflexia. Methods. 14 patients (6 women, 8 men) were enrolled in a 12 week prospective study. Mean age was 52 years. Patients were affected by detrusor hyperreflexia secondary to multiple sclerosis (4), mielitis (5), incomplete spinal cord injury (2), stroke (1) or Parkinson's disease (2). All patients had urgency/frequency and urge incontinence episodes. A needle was inserted 5 cm cephalad to the medial malleolus and connected to a stimulation device for 30 minutes at weekly ses sions (pulse width 200 microsec; frequency 20 Hz; adjustable current 0-10mA). At 0 and 12 weeks the following parameters were recorded: voiding frequency, the number of leakage episodes per 24 h and quality of life score (SF-36 and I-QoL). Results. 9/14 patients (64%) continued the treatment on a patient specific tapering protocol, having showed a clinical improvement >50%. Conclusions. Percutaneous afferent stimulation of the posterior tibial nerve is an effective, non-invasive option to treat detrusor hyperreflexia. Improvement was seen in clinical parameters as well as in subjective QoL-data.
2003
Pubblicato
Rilevanza nazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/24 - UROLOGIA
Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA
Italian
Neuro-urology; Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation; Urodynamics; Neurology (clinical)
FINAZZI AGRO', E., Petta, F., D'Amico, A., Miano, R., Musco, S., Micali, F., et al. (2003). Trattamento dell'incontinenza urinaria neurogena per mezzo della stimolazione elettrica percutanea del nervo tibiale posteriore. NUOVA RIVISTA DI NEUROLOGIA, 13(2), 66-70.
FINAZZI AGRO', E; Petta, F; D'Amico, A; Miano, R; Musco, S; Micali, F; Caltagirone, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/169341
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