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Bulbocavernosus muscle responses after suprapubic stimulation: analysis and measurement of suprapubic bulbocavernosus reflex latency
Authors:Amarenco Gerard  Bayle Beatrice  Ismael Samer Sheikh  Kerdraon Jacques
Affiliation:Department of Neurologic Rehabilitation, Urodynamic and Neurophysiology Laboratory, H?pital Rothschild, Assistance Publique-H?pitaux deParis, Paris, France. gerard.amarenco@rth.ap-hop-paris.fr
Abstract:Our objective was to describe pelvic floor responses with measurement of reflex latency after suprapubic mechanical stimulation. Twenty-one patients without neurological disease were studied. They were 14 women and seven men. The mean age was 51 (SD = 14.2). Motor responses were recorded with a needle electrode inserted in the left bulbocavernosus muscle. Stimulation was delivered with an electromechanical hammer, tapping directly on the suprapubic area. A polyphasic muscular response was always easily elicited in all patients. The man latency was 67.5 milliseconds (SD = 14.7). The reproducibility between the first and second mechanical responses was good with no statistical difference (r=0.966;P = 0.0001). In three patients who underwent cystometry, no rise in detrusor pressure was observed during mechanical stimulation of the suprapubic area. Our study clearly demonstrates a suprapubic bulbocavernosus reflex (SBR). Tapping the suprapubic area is a strong stimulus, reflexively mediated, used in the management of neurogenic bladder to determine a bladder contraction. However, the reflex consisting of pelvic floor muscle contraction after suprapubic stimulation was not specifically studied in humans. Many arguments can be put forth for a polysynaptic reflex (polyphasic response, habituation and short latency of the reflex, mean latency in the habitual values of R2 responses after electrical stimulation of the dorsal nerve of the penis). We hypothesize that the true stimulus is the stimulation of the bladder wall tensoreceptors, the integration level of the SBR is the sacral segments and the efferent limb the pudendal nerve, and afferent pathways could be conducted by pelvic nerve fibers. Competition between a preponderant (or exaggerated) SBR and a bladder contraction after suprapubic tapping may constitute an equivalent of detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia in some suprasacral bladders.
Keywords:suprapubic bulbocavernosus reflex  neurogenic bladder  spinal cord injury  detrusor‐sphincter dyssynergia
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