2000
DOI: 10.1007/s001200050347
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Volumetrie der Harnblase mittels implantierbaren Ultraschallsensoren

Abstract: Experimental studies revealed that the contractile response of the urinary bladder to sacral anterior root stimulation depends on the actual bladder volume. Furthermore, no clinical relevant technique is available for continuous monitoring of the bladder wall distension respectively bladder volume in paraplegic patients. The presented study investigates the reliability of especially developed implantable ultrasound sensors as a sensoric system for continuous monitoring of the bladder volume. In six anaesthesiz… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…These include: impedance measurements on the abdomen (KIM et al, 1998) or directly on the bladder wall (WALTZ et al, 1971;PROVOST and SAWAN, 1997), local distension measurement of the bladder wall using permanent magnets (DREHER et al, 1972) and bladder dimension estimation using implanted ultrasound sensors (SCHEEPE et al, 2000). However, non-invasive ultrasonic techniques are most often employed: either by means of suprapubic biplanar techniques on standard scanners (GRIFFITHS et al, 1986;WILLIOT et al, 1989) or by using dedicated bladder scanners (CARDENAS et al, 1988).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These include: impedance measurements on the abdomen (KIM et al, 1998) or directly on the bladder wall (WALTZ et al, 1971;PROVOST and SAWAN, 1997), local distension measurement of the bladder wall using permanent magnets (DREHER et al, 1972) and bladder dimension estimation using implanted ultrasound sensors (SCHEEPE et al, 2000). However, non-invasive ultrasonic techniques are most often employed: either by means of suprapubic biplanar techniques on standard scanners (GRIFFITHS et al, 1986;WILLIOT et al, 1989) or by using dedicated bladder scanners (CARDENAS et al, 1988).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%