Reflexes and somatic responses as predictors of ejaculation by penile vibratory stimulation in men with spinal cord injury
Autor: | Nancy L. Brackett, Teodoro C. Aballa, Charles M. Lynne, Vincent G. Bird, Sean M. Ferrell |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Aging medicine.medical_specialty Ejaculation Vibration Central nervous system disease Bulbocavernosus reflex Predictive Value of Tests Physical Stimulation Reflex medicine Paralysis Humans Spinal cord injury Spinal Cord Injuries Retrospective Studies Hip business.industry General Medicine medicine.disease Surgery body regions Neurology Anesthesia cardiovascular system Neurology (clinical) medicine.symptom business Paraplegia Anejaculation Penis |
Zdroj: | Spinal Cord. 39:514-519 |
ISSN: | 1476-5624 1362-4393 |
Popis: | Study design: Retrospective chart review. Objective: To identify factors in addition to level of injury (LOI) that may predict ejaculation by penile vibratory stimulation (PVS) in spinal cord injured males. Setting: Major urban medical school and teaching hospital. Materials and methods: Presence of a bulbocavernosus response (BCR) and a hip flexor response (HR) before PVS (n=123 patients), and somatic responses during PVS (n=204 trials performed on a subset of 44 patients) were evaluated for their frequency of occurrence on trials with and without ejaculation. Results: Overall ejaculation success rates for cervical, T1‐T6, and T7‐T12 LOI were 71%, 73%, and 35%, respectively. Eighty per cent of patients who were positive for both BCR and HR ejaculated with PVS, while only 8% of patients who were negative for both BCR and HR ejaculated with PVS. For cervical injuries, BCR and HR were no more predictive of ejaculation by PVS than LOI alone. T1‐T6 patients were more likely to ejaculate when at least one reflex was present. T7‐T12 patients with no BCR were unlikely to ejaculate by PVS. Except for abdominal contractions, somatic responses were not present in the majority of PVS trials. When they were present, however, they occurred in a high percentage of ejaculation trials: withdrawal response (hip flexion, knee flexion and thigh adduction) (90%), piloerection (84%), extremity spasms (83%), thigh abduction (80%), and thigh adduction (72%). Conclusion: We recommend that patients with cervical injuries initially undergo PVS. Patients with T1‐T6 LOI with at least one reflex present, and patients with T7‐T12 LOI with both reflexes, or only BCR present, may undergo PVS. Certain somatic/autonomic responses, when seen, may help in deciding whether to continue with a given trial, or give a repeat trial, of PVS. Sponsorship: The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis and the State of Florida Specific Appropriations. Spinal Cord (2001) 39, 514‐519 |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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