Autologous rectus abdominis fascia sling surgery following unsuccessful synthetic midurethral sling
Yoshitaka Kurano, Nobutaka Shimizu, Rie Yoshimura, Ryohei Iga, Kaya Atagi, Tomoya Nao, Hideo Fukuhara, Satoshi Fukata, Shingo Ashida, Keiji Inoue

TL;DR
This paper describes a successful surgery using a patient's own abdominal tissue to treat urinary incontinence after a failed synthetic sling.
Contribution
The paper introduces a reliable method for autologous rectus abdominis fascia sling surgery using Advantage™.
Findings
The patient had 0 g of leakage one month post-surgery.
The procedure was successful in treating stress urinary incontinence recurrence.
The method is considered reliable even for those unfamiliar with conventional techniques.
Abstract
We performed autologous rectus abdominis fascia sling surgery using Advantage™ following an unsuccessful synthetic midurethral sling. At the age of 76 years, the patient experienced stress urinary incontinence recurrence. A 1‐h pad test resulted in 259 g of leakage. A pressure flow study verified urine leakage while coughing and straining without detrusor overactivity. Abdominal leak point pressure was 10 cmH2O. Autologous rectus abdominis fascia sling surgery was performed using Advantage™. One month postoperatively, a 1‐h pad test resulted in 0 g of leakage. We believe that this method will allow the fascia sling procedure to be performed reliably even if one is unfamiliar with conventional autologous rectus abdominis fascia sling surgery.
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Taxonomy
TopicsPelvic floor disorders treatments · Body Contouring and Surgery · Urinary Bladder and Prostate Research
