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he idea of the experiment is to calculate the volume of fluid that is required to raise cuff pressure from 20 cmH2O to 120 cmH2O in the American Medical System's AMS 800 Artificial Urinary Sphincter (AUS).
Full description
The current AMS 800 is not personalized to the patient's needs. Most men only need 20 cm H2O of urethral compression to remain dry when they are sedentary, yet need 120 cm H2O of urethral compression when they are active. The current device compromises with an in between pressure - as high as it can be without exceeding safety tolerance thresholds. As such many men still leak when they are active. In fact, this compromise is so central to the device that a new term has evolved to describe men's suboptimal level of continence after the AMS 800. We call it "social continence", meaning that they are dry enough to only have to wear 1-2 pads per day for protection.
The market is hungry for a device that can adapt to the patient's level of activity, reducing the pressure most of the day to protect the urethra and then briefly increasing the pressure when he is more active.
The experimental procedure is explained below and care will be taken to make sure the pressure sensor is sterile. The experiment involves minimal risk and will be conducted by the PI who has 10+ years of experience in AUS implantations.
The procedure for implanting the AMS 800 is mentioned in the Operating Manual attached with this protocol. The treatment procedure is linked with the experimental setup designed by the PI and the research student in the following manner:
For all other details including device description and post-operative care, refer to the AMS 800 operating Manual. All devices including the AMS 800 (PMA-P000053) and the Edward LifeSciences Pressure Transducer (501K- K142749) are FDA approved.
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8 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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