To analyze and quantify sacral spinal excitability through bulbocavernosus reflex (BCR) stimulus-response curves.
Thirty subjects with upper motor neuron lesions (UMN) and nine controls were included in this prospective, monocentric study. Sacral spinal excitability was assessed using stimulus-response curves of the BCR, modeled at different bladder filling volumes relative to the desire to void (as defined by the International Continence Society) during a cystometry. Variations in α (i.e. the slope of the stimulus-response curve) were considered as an indicator of the modulation of sacral spinal excitability.
In all subjects, α increased during bladder filling suggesting the modulation of spinal sacral excitability during the filling phase. This increase was over 30% in 96.7% of neurological subjects and 88.9% of controls. The increase was higher before the first sensation to void in the neurological population (163.15%), compared to controls, (29.91%), p < 0.001.
We showed the possibility of using BCR stimulus-response curves to characterize sacral spinal response with an amplification of this response during bladder filling as well as a difference in this response amplification in patients with UMN in comparison with a control group.
BCR, through stimulus-response curves, might be an indicator of pelvic-perineal exaggerated reflex response and possibly a tool for evaluating treatment effectiveness.
Copyright © 2021 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
About The Expert
Gabriel Miget
Claire Hentzen
Nicolas Turmel
Camille Chesnel
Frédérique Le Breton
Samer Sheikh Ismael
Jacques Kerdraon
Gérard Amarenco
References
PubMed