Method and apparatus for electrical stimulation adjunct...

Surgery: light – thermal – and electrical application – Light – thermal – and electrical application – Electrical therapeutic systems

Reexamination Certificate

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C128SDIG008

Reexamination Certificate

active

06505074

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to electrical neuromodulation therapy for medical disorders, more specifically neuromodulation therapy for urinary incontinence and urological disorders utilizing an implanted lead-receiver and external stimulator containing predetermined programs.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Biological and human clinical research has shown utility of electrical nerve stimulation for urinary incontinence and a broad group of urological disorders. This invention is directed to the adjunct therapy for these disorders utilizing an implanted lead-receiver and an external stimulator with predetermined stimulation programs.
In considering the background of urinary urge incontinence,
FIG. 1
shows a sagittal section of the human female pelvis showing the bladder
10
and urethra
13
in relation to other anatomic structures. Urinary continence requires a relaxed bladder during the collecting phase and permanent closure of the urethra, whereas at micturition (urination), an intravesical pressure above the opening pressure of the simultaneously relaxing urethra has to be generated. These functions of the bladder and urethra are centrally coordinated and non-separable. At bladder filling, the sensation of urge is mediated by slowly adapting mechanoreceptors in the bladder wall and the same receptors provide the triggering signal for micturition and the main driving force for a sustained micturition contraction. The mechanoreceptors are, technically speaking, tension receptors. It has been found that they respond equally well to tension increases induced passively by bladder filling and those induced actively by a detrusor contraction. These receptors have high dynamic sensitivity and are easily activated by external pressure transients, as may occur during coughing or tapping of the abdominal wall. Their faithful response to active changes in bladder pressure is well illustrated.
When sufficiently activated, the mechanorecptors trigger a coordinated micturition reflex via a center in the upper pons
88
, as depicted schematically in FIG.
2
. The reflex detrusor
92
(muscle in the wall of the urinary bladder) contraction generates an increased bladder pressure and an even stronger activation of the mechanoreceptors. Their activity in turn reinforces the pelvic motor output to the bladder, which leads to a further increase in pressure and more receptor activation and so on. In this way, the detrusor contraction is to a large extent self generating once initiated. Such a control mechanism usually is referred to as a positive feedback, and it may explain the typical all-or-nothing behavior of the parasympathetic motor output to the bladder. Once urine enters the urethra, the contraction is further enhanced by reflex excitation from urethral receptors. Quantitatively, the bladder receptors are most important.
A great advantage of the positive feedback system is that it ascertains a complete emptying of the bladder during micturition. As long as there is any fluid left in the lumen, the intravesical pressure will be maintained above the threshold for the mechanoreceptors and thus provide a continuous driving force for the detrusor. A drawback with this system is that it can easily become unstable. Any stimulus that elicits a small burst of impulses in mechanoreceptor afferents may trigger a full-blown micturition reflex. To prevent this from happening during the filling phase, the neuronal system controlling the bladder is equipped with several safety devices both at the spinal and supraspinal levels.
The best-known spinal mechanism is the reflex control of the striated urethral sphincter
90
, which increases its activity in response to bladder mechanoreceptor activation during filling. An analogous mechanism is Edvardsen's reflex, which involves machanoreceptor activation of inhibitory sympathetic neurons to the bladder. The sympathetic efferents have a dual inhibitory effect, acting both at the postganglionic neurons in the vesical ganglia and directly on the detrusor muscle of the bladder
92
. The sphincter and sympathetic reflexes are automatically turned off at the spinal cord level during a normal micturition. At the supraspinal level, there are inhibitory connections from the cerebral cortex and hypothalamus to the pontine micturition center. The pathways are involved in the voluntary control of continence. Other inhibitory systems seem to originate from the pontine and medullary parts of the brainstem with at least partly descending connections.
Bladder over-activity and urinary urge incontinence may result from an imbalance between the excitatory positive feedback system of the bladder
10
and inhibitory control systems causing a hyperexcitable voiding reflex. Such an imbalance may occur after macroscopic lesions at many sites in the nervous system or after minor functional disturbances of the excitatory or inhibitory circuits. Urge incontinence due to detrusor instability seldom disappears spontaneoulsly. The symptomatic pattern also usually is consistent over long periods.
Based on clinical experience, subtypes of urinary incontinance include, Phasic detrusor instability and uninhibited overactive bladder. Phasic detrusor instability is characterized by normal or increased bladder sensation, phasic bladder contractions occurring spontaneously during bladder filling or on provocation, such as by rapid filling, coughing, or jumping. This condition results from a minor imbalance between the bladder's positive-feedback system and the spinal inhibitory mechanisms. Uninhibited overactive bladder is characterized by loss of voluntary control of micturition and impairment of bladder sensation. The first sensation of filling is experienced at a normal or lowered volume and is almost immediately followed by involuntary micturition. The patient does not experience a desire to void until she/he is already voiding with a sustained detrusor contraction and a concomitant relaxation of the urethra, i.e., a well-coordinated micturition reflex. At this stage, she/he is unable to interrupt micturition voluntarily. The sensory disturbance of these subjects is not in the periphery, at the level of bladder mechanoreceptors, as the micturition reflex occurs at normal or even small bladder volumes. More likely, the suprapontine sensory projection to the cortex is affected. Such a site is consistent with the coordinated micturition and the lack of voluntary control. The uninhibited overactive bladder is present in neurogenic dysfunction.
Since bladder over-activity results from defective central inhibition, it seems logical to improve the situation by reinforcing some other inhibitory system. Patients with stress and urge incontinence are difficult to treat adequately. Successful therapy of the urge component does not influence the stress incontinence. While an operation for stress incontinence sometimes results in deterioration of urgency. Electro stimulation is a logical alternative in mixed stress and urge incontinence, since the method improves urethral closure as well as bladder control. Drug treatment often is insufficient and, even when effective, does not lead to restoration of a normal micturition pattern.
Neuromodulation is a technique that uses electrical stimulation of the sacral nerves, (a general diagram of spinal cord and sacral nerves
85
is shown in FIG.
3
). The aim of this treatment modality is to achieve detrusor
92
inhibition by chronic electrical stimulation of afferent somatic sacral nerve fibers
85
via implanted electrodes coupled to a subcutaneously placed pulse generation means.
The rationale of this treatment modality is based on the existence of spinal inhibitory systems that are capable of interrupting a detrusor
92
contraction. Inhibition can be achieved by electrical stimulation of afferent anorectal branches of the pelvic nerve, afferent sensory fibers in the pudendal nerve and muscle afferents from the limbs. Most of these branches and fibers reach the spinal cord via the dorsal roots of the sacral nerves
85
. Of

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