Following functional magnetic stimulation, the mean colonic transit time for all patients decreased from 62.6 to 50.4 h (p<0.001). The patients' Knowles-Eccersley-Scott Symptom scores decreased from 24.5 to 19.2 points (p<0.001). The colonic transit time decrement in both group 1 (p=0.003) and group 2 (p=0.043) showed significant differences, as did the Knowles-Eccersley-Scott Symptom score in both groups following stimulation and in the 3-month follow-up results (p<0.01). The improvements in bowel function indicate that functional magnetic stimulation,featuring broad-spectrum application, can be incorporated successfully into other therapies as an optimal adjuvant treatment for neurogenic bowel dysfunction resulting from spinal cord injury.
Our results suggest that enhanced NCE in male rats administrated with EGb 761 may be related to the central nNOS activity in the PVN and the spinal cord.
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