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  • Title: Characterization of pressure changes in the lower urinary tract during coughing with special reference to the demands on the pressure recording equipment.
    Author: Thind P, Bagi P, Lose G, Mortensen S.
    Journal: Neurourol Urodyn; 1994; 13(3):219-25. PubMed ID: 7920678.
    Abstract:
    The exact demands on urodynamic equipment for measurement of coughs and cough associated pressure changes in the lower urinary tract have been analyzed from high-speed pressure recordings using a double microtip transducer and a storage oscilloscope. The equipment was tested in vitro by the step-test method. The natural frequency response was 175.6 Hz and the rise-time 2.5 ms, resulting in accurate measurements of frequencies up to about 60 Hz, which is way above the clinically measured frequencies. Four men and 2 women, all of whom were healthy volunteers, were examined in the supine position with an empty bladder. Pressures were measured in the bladder and in the external sphincter zone of the urethra. The spectral power density of the bladder and urethral pressures were calculated by Fourier analysis. The pressure changes in the urethra were in all volunteers equal to or slower than in the bladder. The analysis of the spectral power density showed that 99% of the pressure changes could be recorded with an instrument capable of recording 9 Hz frequencies, i.e., with a sampling rate of 18 Hz or more.
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