Urinary retention occurring in young women as an isolated phenomenon was often thought to be psychogenic in origin. However, in 1988, Fowler et al. described a syndrome in young women in which urinary retention was the predominant feature and in which electromyography (EMG) of the striated urethral sphincter revealed a striking abnormality. This abnormality, it was postulated, would result in an inability of the sphincter to relax and retention would therefore result. Until recently there was no effective treatment for this disorder except management by clean intermittent self-catheterisation. However, preliminary results of neuromodulation using a Medtronic sacral nerve stimulator have been particularly promising in this group of patients. The response is often spectacular; a woman who has not passed urine per urethram for many months or years will frequently find that within a few hours of insertion of the percutaneous nerve evaluation (PNE) lead, she can void quite normally with little or no residual urine. The precise mechanism of action is yet to be defined, but measurements of the latency of anal sphincter contraction on S3 stimulation during PNE are so prolonged that they can only be the result of an afferent-mediated reflex.
The morbidity and mortality of 50 patients undergoing closure of loop ileostomy was reviewed. The patients had a mean age of 57.9 years and significant intercurrent disease. There were no in‐hospital deaths or anastomotic leakage at the site of closure. Small bowel obstruction occurred in 12% of patients, all of whom responded to conservative treatment. The wound infection rate was 14%, but the development of a wound infection did not result in a significantly longer hospital stay. We conclude that, when a careful technique of sharp dissection is used, closure of a loop ileostomy is associated with an acceptably low incidence of complications even in elderly and often unwell patients.
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