Urethral pressure response patterns induced by squeeze in continent and incontinent women

[1]  J. Ashton-Miller,et al.  Can women without visible pubococcygeal muscle in MR images still increase urethral closure pressures? , 2004, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[2]  K. Thor,et al.  Central nervous system control of the lower urinary tract: new pharmacological approaches to stress urinary incontinence in women. , 2004, The Journal of urology.

[3]  A. Visco,et al.  Comparison of measurements obtained with microtip and external water pressure transducers , 2003, International Urogynecology Journal.

[4]  C. Agardh,et al.  A screening procedure detecting high-yield candidates for OGTT. The Women's Health in the Lund Area (WHILA) study: A population based study of middle-aged Swedish women , 2004, European Journal of Epidemiology.

[5]  J. Lidfeldt,et al.  Urethral pressure changes in response to squeeze: a population-based study in healthy and incontinent 53- to 63-year-old women. , 2003, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[6]  J. Lidfeldt,et al.  Urodynamic characterisation of women with naive urinary incontinence: a population-based study in subjectively incontinent and healthy 53-63 years old women. , 2002, European urology.

[7]  L. Brubaker,et al.  Relationship between levator ani contraction and motor unit activation in the urethral sphincter. , 2002, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[8]  J. Ashton-Miller,et al.  Age effects on urethral striated muscle. I. Changes in number and diameter of striated muscle fibers in the ventral urethra. , 2002, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[9]  P. Abrams,et al.  Good urodynamic practices: Uroflowmetry, filling cystometry, and pressure‐flow studies * * , 2002, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[10]  A. Weber Is Urethral Pressure Profilometry a Useful Diagnostic Test for Stress Urinary Incontinence? , 2001, Obstetrical & gynecological survey.

[11]  G. Lose,et al.  Urethral Pressure Measurement - Problems and Clinical Value , 2001, Scandinavian journal of urology and nephrology. Supplementum.

[12]  K. Creed,et al.  The innervation and properties of the urethral striated muscle. , 2001, Scandinavian journal of urology and nephrology. Supplementum.

[13]  A. Mattiasson,et al.  Female stress, urge, and mixed urinary incontinence are associated with a chronic and progressive pelvic floor/vaginal neuromuscular disorder: An investigation of 317 healthy and incontinent women using vaginal surface electromyography , 1999, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[14]  B. Schuessler,et al.  Can simultaneous perineal sonography and urethrocystometry help explain urethral pressure variations? , 1997, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[15]  G. Barbalias,et al.  INTERNATIONAL CONTINENCE SOCIETY , 1996 .

[16]  U. Ulmsten,et al.  Urethral pressure increase on effort originates from within the urethra, and continence from musculovaginal closure , 1995, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[17]  R. Stien,et al.  Needle emg registration of striated urethral wall and pelvic floor muscle activity patterns during cough, valsalva, abdominal, hip adductor, and gluteal muscle contractions in nulliparous healthy females , 1994, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[18]  R. Mayer,et al.  Correlations between dynamic urethral profilometry and perivaginal pelvic muscle activity , 1994, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[19]  G. Lose,et al.  Variations in urethral and bladder pressure during stress episodes in healthy women. , 1990, British journal of urology.

[20]  T. Rud Urethral pressure profile in continent women from childhood to old age , 1980, Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica.