These results suggest an objective acute effect of posterior tibial nerve stimulation on urodynamic parameters. Improved bladder overactivity is an encouraging argument to propose posterior tibial nerve stimulation as a noninvasive treatment modality in clinical practice.
This preliminary study demonstrates the predominance of parasympathetic activity with the bladder emptied and a preponderance of sympathetic activity at the end of bladder filling in women with overactive bladder syndrome. These results suggest dysfunction in the autonomic balance, as implied in idiopathic overactive bladder syndrome. Further studies in a larger population of patients with overactive bladder syndrome with reference to normal subjects free of urinary symptoms are necessary to confirm this hypothesis.
Pelvic floor muscle contraction increases with the importance of intra-abdominal pressure generated during stress. This gradual adaptation of pelvic floor muscles is probably 1 of the main factors which contributes to stress urinary and fecal continence in women. It must be preprogrammed by the central nervous system to maintain continence during various stresses.
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