Supine urethroscopic and standing cystometry as screening methods for the detection of detrusor instability
- PMID: 3601269
Supine urethroscopic and standing cystometry as screening methods for the detection of detrusor instability
Abstract
Two hundred eighteen women undergoing multichannel urethrocystometry were also studied with supine urethroscopic cystometry and/or standing single-channel cystometry to evaluate the use of the latter two studies in screening patients at risk for detrusor instability. Thirty-one percent of the women were found to have detrusor instability on multichannel urethrocystometry. Only 24.6% of these patients were detected with supine urethroscopic cystometry, whereas 59.3% were detected with standing single-channel cystometry. The specificity of these tests was better (94.4 and 82.4%, respectively) than the above sensitivities, but analysis of their predictive values confirmed that they are both poor screening tools for populations at risk for detrusor instability.
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