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Feasibility of Real-Time Conditional Sacral Neuromodulation Using Wireless Bladder Pressure Sensor. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Continuous sacral neuromodulation (SNM) effectively treats overactive bladder by reducing leakage and increasing storage capacity, while conditional SNM adapts stimulation based on bladder conditions.
  • A study using a wireless bladder pressure sensor and the Medtronic Summit RC+S system tested four conditional SNM methods over five days on four female sheep, aiming to prove the effectiveness of a closed-loop system.
  • Results showed that the neurostimulator successfully executed stimulation commands rapidly, and while there was weak correlation with catheter-based pressure measurements, the system could still accurately trigger SNM, indicating potential for personalized treatment in future human applications.

Article Abstract

Continuous sacral neuromodulation (SNM) is used to treat overactive bladder, reducing urine leakage and increasing capacity. Conditional SNM applies stimulation in response to changing bladder conditions, and is an opportunity to study neuromodulation effects in various disease states. A key advantage of this approach is saving power consumed by stimulation pulses. This study demonstrated feasibility of automatically applying neuromodulation using a wireless bladder pressure sensor, a real-time control algorithm, and the Medtronic Summit RC+S neurostimulation research system. This study tested feasibility of four conditional SNM paradigms over five days in 4 female sheep. Primary outcomes assessed proof of concept of closed-loop system function. While the bladder pressure sensor correlated only weakly to simultaneous catheter-based pressure measurement (correlation 0.26-0.89, median r = 0.52), the sensor and algorithm were accurate enough to automatically trigger SNM appropriately. The neurostimulator executed 98.5% of transmitted stimulation commands with a median latency of 72 ms (n = 1,206), suggesting that rapid decision-making and control is feasible with this platform. On average, bladder capacity increased for continuous SNM and algorithm-controlled paradigms. Some animals responded more strongly to conditional SNM, suggesting that treatment could be individualized. Future research in conditional SNM may elucidate the physiologic underpinnings of differential response and enable clinical translation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9359615PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2021.3117518DOI Listing

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