Advances in bioelectronics have enabled progress 1 in the use of implanted electronic devices for treating disease. In the clinic, such approaches to modulating nerve cells that control bladder ...
It's a problem nobody wants to talk about, suffering in silence and embarrassment. Of the 25 million Americans living with incontinence, 80% are women. But a pacemaker for the bladder may be the ...
The future of bioelectronic medicine is looking a little brighter thanks to an LED implant which uses light to control nerve cells in the bladder. A new device which uses light to control nerve cells, ...
A bladder stimulator is a device that may help people with an overactive bladder or those unable to control their urge to urinate. The device can either go under the skin of the buttock or on the ...
If bladder nerves are damaged from surgery or from a disease, then a patient often loses sensation and is unaware that their bladder is full. Should you run to the bathroom now? Or can you hold it ...
Effective treatments for incontinence are urgently needed. Now, a multi-institutional team of researchers has developed a wireless system that can measure bladder function in freely moving rats over ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results