An ambulatory surgical procedure under local anesthesia for treatment of female urinary incontinence
β Scribed by U. Ulmsten; L. Henriksson; P. Johnson; G. Varhos
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 855 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0937-3462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The object was to study prospectively the results of a modified intravaginal slingplasty for the surgical treatment of female stress incontinence, carried out under local anesthesia as a day procedure. Seventy five patients with genuine stress incontinence were operated upon and followed for a 2-year period. All patients were diagnosed urodynamically to have genuine stress incontinence. Pad tests and quality of life assessments were carried out in all patients both pre-and postoperatively. There were no intra-or postoperative complications and 63 patients (84 %) were completely cured throughout the 2-year follow-up period. Six patients (8%) were significantly improved, i.e. they did not loose urine apart from an occasional leakage during severe cold etc. In the remaining 6 patients (8%) no improvement was seen. These failures were obvious at the first postoperative check-up after 2 months. Thus, there were no relapses after 2 months. All but 5 patients were able to void properly directly after surgery. These 5 needed an indwelling catheter during the night directly after the operation. All 75 patients were released from the hospital the same day or the day after surgery without catheterization. Mean sick leave was 10 days and mean operation time 22 minutes. No defect healing or rejection of the sling occurred. It is concluded that the procedure described is a promising new technique for the surgical treatment of female stress incontinence. Prospective long-term studies including more patients are in progress to establish the definitive place of this technique in the clinical routine.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract We assessed the reproducibility and feasibility of a rapid perineal padβtest designed for evaluation of stress urinary incontinence treatment. In an experimental study, we included 34 women with genuine stress incontinence, 13 with urge incontinence and 10 nonβincontinent volunteers for