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Slowed conduction in the pudendal nerves in idiopathic (neurogenic) faecal incontinence

497

Citations

13

References

1984

Year

TLDR

The study used anorectal manometry, concentric needle and single‑fiber EMG, and a novel digitally directed transrectal stimulation/recording technique to measure pudendal nerve terminal motor latency in 30 patients with idiopathic faecal incontinence. The terminal motor latency was significantly prolonged in incontinent patients compared with controls (P = 0.01), supporting the hypothesis that idiopathic faecal incontinence results from damage to the pelvic floor nerve supply.

Abstract

Abstract We have studied 30 patients with idiopathic (neurogenic) faecal incontinence using anorectal manometry and concentric needle and single fibre electromyographic methods. We have measured the terminal motor latency in the pudendal nerves of these patients using a new digitally directed transrectal stimulation and recording technique (right mean (±s.d.) 3.2±0.9 ms, left mean (±s.d.) 3.0±0.9 ms) and compared the results with those obtained from 28 normal subjects (right mean (±s.d.) 2.0±0.5 ms, left mean (±s.d.) 1.9±0.3 ms). These differences between normal and incontinent patients were significant (P = 0.01) using the Wilcoxon Rank Sum Test. The findings support the hypothesis that idiopathic (neurogenic) faecal incontinence is due to damage to the nerve supply of the pelvic floor musculature.

References

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