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at UCSF, (415) 476-2557
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Bladder pacemaker restores urinary control
Just as a cardiac pacemaker helps maintain a steady heartbeat, a new bladder
pacemaker helps men and women with debilitating bladder problems regain
control of this vital function, according to UCSF Stanford Health Care physicians,
who pioneered the technology.
The implantable bladder pacemaker delivers a painless electrical stimulus
to the nerve fibers that regulate the muscle of the bladder. This enables
patients to control urine storage and release, said Dr. Emil Tanagho, a
UCSF professor of urology whose early work with paraplegics and quadriplegics
led to the development of the device.
He and Dr. Rodney Anderson, a Stanford professor of urology, are among the
three physicians in California -- and the only two in Northern California
-- who are currently implanting the device. The Food and Drug Administration
approved the device in September 1997.
Tanagho said the new pacemaker may benefit patients suffering from urge
incontinence, the inability to control the strong, sudden urge to urinate.
It could also help people with severe bladder problems associated with multiple
sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, interstitial cystitis or pelvic pain produced
by overactive pelvic muscles, he said.
People who lack bladder control can be virtually incapacitated by their
condition, making multiple daily trips to the restroom and suffering the
embarrassment and discomfort of frequent bladder leakage, he said.
The bladder pacemaker "is a major breakthrough in the management of
many patients with severe voiding problems that can interfere with their
well-being," Tanagho said. "It can restore their freedom and give
them back normal function.
"For these patients it's a major change in lifestyle as well as productivity,"
he added. "It's a quality-of-life issue, and the difference is day
and night."
Implanted under skin
The pacemaker, about two inches in diameter and one-fourth inch thick, is
encased in a stainless steel frame and is surgically implanted under the
skin in the lower abdomen. It carries a lead wire, containing four platinum
electrodes, that is threaded to a site within the sacral canal, near the
sacral nerves at the base of the spine. These are the nerves that regulate
bladder function.
Once installed, the device is externally programmed by the physician to
send electrical impulses to the nerves. This signals the bladder and pelvic
muscles to contract or relax as urine is stored or eliminated. Patients
can also regulate the device, within certain set limits, by turning it up
or down.
In clinical trials in the United States, Canada and Europe, the device reduced
the number of leaking episodes among 74 percent of the 458 patients within
six months after implantation. Almost half of the patients remained completely
dry. The most common problems associated with the device were discomfort
at the pacemaker site caused by the presence of the device, the movement
of the lead wire, infection and skin irritation, the studies found. But
all of these were mild and infrequent, the studies found.
When the stimulation is on, patients usually report feeling a kind of tugging
sensation and may experience a vibration or an electric tingling, but over
time they may forget the device is in place, Anderson said.
Few treatment options
The device is a much-needed addition to the medical arsenal, he said, because
in the past physicians have had few options to offer patients with severe
bladder control problems. Some medications can help regulate bladder function,
but they don't work for all patients and can have unpleasant side-effects,
he noted. Some patients may undergo a surgical procedure known as bladder
augmentation, but it is a major operation that has mixed results, he said.
"We just have very weak tools to combat this kind of problem, so this
[device] is a welcome addition," Anderson said.
Patients go through a preliminary, three-to-seven-day period of testing
before the bladder pacemaker can be installed. This involves use of a test
stimulator, resembling a pager, that the patient can wear on a belt. The
stimulator is attached to a pacer electrode that is placed through the skin
of the patient's lower back, where it generates an electrical pulse to the
sacral nerves.
About 50 percent of the time, the test stimulator is found to help relieve
patients' symptoms and restore bladder control, Anderson said. These individuals
then can be fitted with the implantable device. For patients, installation
is a relatively simple surgical procedure that takes 1 1/2 to two hours,
he said.
Although few physicians currently have experience in installing the new
device, Tanagho said he expects the the pacemaker to gain wider availability
over time as more urologists receive the specialized training required for
its implantation and use.
A patient's perspective
Dianalynn Pfennig, a patient with multiple sclerosis, said her bladder problems
became so severe that she would always bring a change of clothes with her
when she left the house. In 1996, her doctor recommended that she be fitted
with a catheter, a tube attached to the bladder which must be drained several
times a day. She said she knew a catheter would be severely limiting and
could make her susceptible to bladder infections.
"I'm living here in the center of technology," said Pfennig, a
resident of San Jose, Calif. "I told my doctor, 'There's got to be
a better way.'"
She contacted Anderson, who was studying the still-experimental device at
the time. Anderson fitted her with a bladder pacemaker at Stanford in July
1997. Pfennig said she has been virtually dry ever since, although she still
brings a change of clothes wherever she goes, out of sheer habit.
"It's been the best thing that's ever come down the pike for me,"
she said.
Original concept
The original concept for the device grew out of Tanagho's research in the
1970s on methods for managing the bladder in patients with spinal cord injuries.
Duke University researchers had proposed a method of implanting an electrode
in the spinal cord for this purpose, but Tanagho said he found that this
approach could damage the cells in the spinal cord that control urination.
With support from the National Institutes of Health, he then began exploring
the idea of implanting electrodes into the nerve bundles in the sacral root,
conducting clinical trials in the 1980s on paraplegic and quadriplegic patients.
In the process, he said, he found that neurostimulation also could be helpful
to much less severely injured patients who nonetheless had difficulties
with bladder control.
"We found we could rehabilitate them and restore normal bladder function,"
he said.
In the late 1980s, Tanagho directed clinical trials on the first-generation
bladder pacemaker, recruiting Anderson to participate. UCSF now holds the
patent on the technology, which is licensed to Medtronic Inc., of Minneapolis.
Medtronic manufactures the device under the trade name Interstim.
UCSF Stanford Health Care is a private, nonprofit organization created in
November 1997 to bring together the patient-care services of Stanford University
and the University of California, San Francisco.
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