The effect of high frequency sacral nerve stimulation on lower urinary tract function in awake, healthy animals
Jia Han, Brett Hanzlicek, Dario Cabal, Yaneev Hacohen, Anna Rietsch, Douglas Gunzler, Steve J. A. Majerus, Margot S. Damaser, Dennis J. Bourbeau

TL;DR
High-frequency sacral nerve stimulation may help catheter-free bladder emptying by reducing pelvic muscle activity without lowering bladder pressure.
Contribution
Demonstrates that high-frequency sacral nerve stimulation can reduce pelvic floor muscle activity without affecting bladder pressure in healthy animals.
Findings
10 kHz stimulation reduced pelvic floor EMG amplitude compared to lower frequencies.
All stimulation frequencies induced bladder contractions without causing fatigue.
High-frequency stimulation may block pelvic floor nerve signals while preserving bladder function.
Abstract
Many individuals with neurological disorders rely on using catheters to empty their bladder. However, catheters are associated with urethral trauma and urinary tract infections. Peripheral nerve stimulation at frequencies of 500 − 10,000 Hz is associated with reduction of muscle contraction without causing fatigue. We hypothesized that high frequency sacral nerve stimulation would be associated with reduced pelvic muscle activity without reduced bladder pressures. We implanted five healthy cats with pulse generators connected to nerve cuff electrodes on sacral nerves S1 and S2. We applied stimulation at frequencies of 20 Hz, 500 Hz, or 10 kHz. We measured bladder pressure using our custom-designed wireless, catheter-free bladder sensor, and measured pelvic floor electromyogram (EMG) as a proxy for urethral sphincter activity. Stimulation at 10 kHz was associated with a lack of increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrinary Bladder and Prostate Research · Pelvic floor disorders treatments · Anesthesia and Pain Management
