International Neurourology Journal (Mar 2017)

Treatment of Stress Urinary Incontinence in Neurological Patients With an Injectable Elastomer Prosthesis: Preliminary Results

  • Julien Renard,
  • Marco Citeri,
  • Lucia Zanollo,
  • Chiara Guerrer,
  • Luigi Rizzato,
  • Luca Frediani,
  • Christophe Iselin,
  • Michele Spinelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5213/inj.1732644.322
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 75 – 79

Abstract

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Many treatment options for stress urinary incontinence are difficult to apply to neurological patients. Urolastic is a new agent that is primarily indicated for women with mild stress urinary incontinence or men after prostate surgery. In this report, we present a series of 5 cases describing the first use of Urolastic to treat neurological patients. All patients were evaluated with a voiding diary and the use of auxiliary devices as the main indicators of continence. The median operative time was 30.8 minutes, and no complications were observed. Of the 5 patients, 4 reported improved incontinence: 2 switched from diapers to small pads, while the other 2 patients were able to discontinue urinary condom use. The only instance of treatment failure occurred in a patient with a low-compliance bladder. The advantages of this procedure appear to include a soft-cuff effect, reversibility, and minimal invasiveness. However, a future randomized study would be necessary to validate this treatment option.

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