Abstract
In 1981, Tanagho and Schmidt introduced chronic electrical stimulation of the sacral spinal nerves using a permanently implanted sacral foramen electrode and a battery-powered pulse generator for treatment of different kinds of lower urinary tract dysfunction, refractory to conservative treatment. At our department, chronic unilateral electrical stimulation of the S3 sacral spinal nerve has been used for treatment of vesicourethral dysfunction in 55 patients with a mean postoperative follow-up of 44.3 months. Lasting symptomatic improvement of more than 50% was achieved in 16 of 21 patients with motor urge incontinence (76.2%) and in 22 of the 28 patients with urinary retention (78.6%). In our opinion, chronic sacral neuromodulation offers a sustained therapeutic effect to treatment responders that is not achieved by temporary neuromodulation techniques. Chronic neuromodulation should be considered predominantly in patients with urinary retention and in patients with motor urge incontinence who refuse temporary techniques or who require too much effort to achieve a sustained clinical effect.
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