AI Article Synopsis

  • The 1986 preliminary report introduced a modified bladder-neck suspension technique to treat urinary stress incontinence, based on procedures performed from 1982 to 1989.
  • Out of 135 patients, 118 were tracked for long-term follow-up, revealing that 91.5% (108 patients) experienced no urinary leakage.
  • Of the 10 patients who did report leakage, only 2 had persistent stress incontinence and underwent successful reoperation, while the other 8 had mixed-cause urgency incontinence, leading to an impressive adjusted success rate of 98% for genuine stress incontinence treatment.

Article Abstract

In 1986 we published a preliminary report describing a modification for bladder-neck suspension in the treatment of urinary stress incontinence. From 1982 through 1989 135 surgical procedures were performed. Long-term follow-up of these patients is now presented. Of the 135 patients in this study, 118 were available for follow-up at the time of this report; 108 (91.5%) of the 118 reported no urinary leakage. Of the 10 patients who reported continued urinary leakage, only 2 had persistent or recurrent urinary stress incontinence; they were reoperated on with favorable results. The other eight patients reporting urinary leakage were patients with mixed-cause urgency incontinence. The adjusted success rate for the treatment of genuine stress incontinence was therefore 98%.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9378(92)91556-pDOI Listing

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